All posts by csb10.top

India wait on Laxman fitness

Injury worries have continued to haunt India with VVS Laxman remaining an uncertain starter for the first Test against South Africa in Nagpur. He hasn’t yet fully recovered from the finger injury he sustained while fielding during the first Test against Bangladesh in Chittagong last month.Laxman did take part in the nets session at the VCA Stadium on Friday, but a final call on his fitness had not yet been taken. “Of the 15-16 players in the squad, only regarding VVS Laxman is there a little uncertainty,” MS Dhoni said on Friday morning. “He’s at the nets now, he’ll come back and share with the physio how he is feeling, apart from that everyone is fit.”The home side are already without two first-choice batsmen Rahul Dravid and Yuvraj Singh due to injuries, and if Laxman is unavailable, India will be forced to hand debuts to two batsmen – S Badrinath and Rohit Sharma – besides fielding the inexperienced M Vijay.India will also miss Laxman’s safe pair of hands at slip, as he is unlikely to field in that position even if he plays. “There is less chance of Laxman standing in the slip cordon,” Dhoni said.

England save yet another thriller

England 273 (Prior 76, Morkel 5-75) and 296 for 9 (Bell 78, Collingwood 40) drew with South Africa 291 (Kallis 108, Anderson 5-63) and 447 for 7 declared (Smith 183, Amla 95)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsIan Bell produced a superb rearguard as England dug in to preserve their series lead at Cape Town•Getty Images

Ian Bell produced the innings of his life and Paul Collingwood battled for four-and-a-half hours in another masterclass of crease occupation, but England’s ultimate match-saver was once again their No. 11, Graham Onions, who reprised his heroics in the first Test at Centurion by seeing off the final six deliveries of the match, bowled by Morne Morkel, to ensure that England will go to Johannesburg for next week’s fourth and final Test with a 1-0 lead in the series and a chance to emulate the achievement of Michael Vaughan’s men on their last tour of South Africa in 2004-05.In a day of desperate tension that began with England uncomfortably placed on 132 for 3 and then deep in the mire after going to lunch on 179 for 5, Bell and Collingwood seemed to have drawn the sting of South Africa’s attack in an epic and virtually strokeless sixth-wicket stand of 112 in 57 overs. But then, just when it seemed that the draw was inevitable, JP Duminy found the edge that had eluded all of his team-mates, but most particularly the magnificent but luckless Dale Steyn, to send Collingwood on his way for 40, and trigger a fraught final hour in which four wickets were chiselled away for 18 irrelevant runs, in 64 balls.With eight men camped round the bat for the spinners, and gasps and appeals ringing out from the fielders and crowd alike, Matt Prior came and went for 4 from nine balls, brilliantly scooped by AB de Villiers at short leg to give Paul Harris his second wicket of an otherwise disappointing day’s work. Stuart Broad survived one referral for a catch at silly point, but was then nailed on the glove by another Harris lifter, and sent on his way with 20 deliveries of the match remaining. By this stage Steyn, the only seamer to truly rise to the occasion, had been recalled at the Kelvin Grove End give the ever-scrutinised Bell a final test of his resolve, buzzing a full length on and around the top of off stump to keep both the slips and short leg in business.But three deliveries after Broad’s departure, it was Morne Morkel who made the critical incision, as Graeme Smith tossed him the ball for a final, furious two-over burst, and with his first delivery he found extra bounce on a perfect length outside off, for Bell to fence dejectedly to Smith himself at first slip. It had been a magnificent performance from Bell, a vindication of his selection as the sixth batsman in England’s starting XI, and a continuation of the new-found confidence that he had shown since his breakthrough century on the decisive fourth day at Durban. But just when it seemed he was set to be the hero, he blinked and departed for 78 from 213 balls, and South Africa sensed a sensational turnaround.But first they had to get through the unlikely tenth-wicket pairing of Onions and Swann, two men who had already shown their ability with the bat in this series, and now had 17 balls to survive. Onions memorably defied Makhaya Ntini for the final six deliveries at Centurion, and he showed he was primed for survival by riding a vicious fifth-ball lifter from Morkel inches short of gully. To add to the drama, Steyn then required physio treatment after seemingly tweaking his hamstring from the first ball of the penultimate over. Though he was fit to continue, he was destined to finish a luckless day with the under-rewarded figures of 2 for 74 in 35 overs.And so everything, once again, came down to the final over. And just as at Centurion, it was Onions who was left with the job of blocking everything that came his way. Whereas Ntini’s skiddy angles had been comparatively easy to negotiate, Morkel’s height and pace provided a whole new examination of his grit and resolve, as he jabbed down coolly on a brace of probing yorkers, before hauling his bat inside the line of a snorting bouncer that tempted a desperate Smith to call for his final review in the hope of locating some glove. But one delivery later, Onions left well alone in the channel outside off, before turning to the pavilion and punching his fist in triumph.It was a sensational escape, and incredibly England’s third in eight Tests, after their Ashes-transforming performance at Cardiff, and last month’s get-out at Centurion. And the common denominator in all three performances was Paul Collingwood, whose late dismissal meant he was destined yet again to be overlooked in the final analysis. But following his 74 from 245 balls at Cardiff and his 26 not out from 99 at Centurion, today’s 40 from 188 once again had a case to be considered the most critical effort of the lot.Paul Collingwood was the backbone of England’s rearguard yet again•Getty Images

Despite the anxieties of the closing overs of the game, the destiny of the match was, to all intents and purposes, decided in a riveting first hour after lunch, in which Collingwood and Steyn pitted their wits against one another in a duel that already deserves to be recalled in the same breath as Allan Donald’s legendary joust with Mike Atherton at Trent Bridge in 1998. Then, as now, both players recognised the singular importance of the moment, for the new ball had been claimed in the second over of the session, and one quick wicket would have chiselled an opening into England’s lower-order. Then as now, neither player was willing to give an inch.Make that a millimetre, for the defining feature of Steyn’s ferocious six-over burst was the excruciating late swing that he located from a full length on off stump. Time and again he curled the ball at 90mph-plus around the edge of the edge of the bat, as Collingwood’s only response was to play the line of off stump and not flinch a muscle. Finally, as the drinks break loomed and after perhaps a dozen of the closest shaves imaginable, Steyn’s ardour began to dampen, and with the Kookaburra’s short-lived shine beginning to fade, England sensed that they had weathered the storm.At the other end, Bell was left with the easier, but no less critical, task of maintaining his concentration against the second-string fare of Morkel, whose leaping bounce off a good length was let down by a poor line that demanded no strokes, and Friedel de Wet, who underwent an injection in his back before the start of play, and was noticeably down on pace from the Steyn-alike who had hustled England to the brink on his debut at Centurion.Smith soon had no choice but to turn to the lesser threats of Harris and Jacques Kallis, who kept the pressure on in a session that realised just 51 runs, but were unable to turn the screw on two well-established players. Harris in particular was a disappointment against a pair of batsmen whose only interest was survival, and was outperformed by the offspinner, Duminy, who entered the attack in the final over before tea, and instantly began probing Collingwood’s defence with sharp turn towards his precious stumps.Harris, however, did make the first breakthrough of the day for South Africa, from the 12th delivery of his morning spell, when the nightwatchman, James Anderson, under-edged a full-toss onto his boot and into the outstretched right hand of Ashwell Prince at leg gully, who had only moments earlier been waved into position by an alert Boucher. Anderson, however, had done his job, and by surviving for 45 minutes of the morning session, he had raised the frustration levels of his opponents, while at the same time convincing his team-mates in the dressing room that survival was not out of the question.At 153 for 4, however, England were back in trouble, and their predicament could have got even worse from the very first ball that Collingwood faced, when Harris produced a fizzing lifter on off stump that flew into the hands of Kallis at slip. Though the umpire’s finger went up in an instant, Collingwood was equally quick to call for the review, and sure enough the replays showed that his hip had caused the deflection. England were not great fans of UDRS at the start of the series. That reprieve may well have convinced them of its merits.In a sign of things to come, Trott and Collingwood burrowed deep into their shells thereafter, with only seven runs coming from the next nine overs, and Collingwood himself took 21 deliveries to get off the mark. But with thoughts beginning to turn to the new ball, Smith recalled Steyn for another rapid burst, and once again his skiddy pace made the difference.On 42, and after 99 balls of stoic resistance, Trott had no answer to a superb full-length seamer that zipped through his gate and sent his off stump cartwheeling. However, Collingwood, at the non-striker’s end, watched and learned, and resolved to put bat on ball to every single Steyn delivery that bent back into his stumps. Somehow, he avoided nicking any that went the other way.

Kenya scrape last-gasp victory

Kenya 129 for 9 beat Uganda 126 by one wicket
ScorecardKenya took an unassailable 2-0 lead in their series against Uganda, but it took last-pair heroics from Hiren Varaiya and Alfred Luseno to help them scrape to a one-wicket win.It all appeared to be going to plan when Uganda were stuck in and , after a solid opening stand of 34, were bowled out for 126. Once again Kenya’s bowlers did what was asked of them but, not for the first time, their batsmen failed to meet expectations.Seren Waters’ return to international colours ended with a duck, although a breezy 20-ball 24 from David Obuya appeared to have calmed the nerves, and even when the in-form Rakep Patel fell for 17, at 56 for 3 a win still appeared well within reach.But the middle order offered nothing as Alex Obanda (14), Maurice Ouma (7), Jimmy Kamande (5) and Shem Obado (0) came and went, and at 77 for 7 Uganda sensed an upset.Nehemiah Odhiambo and Varaiya then added 33 for the eighth wicket before Odhiambo and Lucas Oluoch fell in quick succession. Eleven were needed and the last pair managed to get them, but it was a far from convincing effort.Kenya will have to end the series with a much better display tomorrow if the critics are to be silenced.

Murali may quit before 2011 World Cup

Muttiah Muralitharan, the Sri Lankan spinner, has said he may quit international cricket before the 2011 World Cup in the subcontinent.Murali, on his fourth tour to India, his final overseas tour, is struggling to come to terms with the placid Indian pitches and a strong batting line-up which has treated him harshly in the series so far. In the second Test, in Kanpur, he went for over 100 runs for the second time in two Tests in the series, and so far his five wickets have cost him 396 runs, at an average of 79.20.”I am 37 years old and I can’t bowl as much as those days because I get tired after 15-16 overs. But I will try and play a little bit of one-day cricket – that’s only 10 overs to bowl. If I find everything is not going well I might retire from both forms of the game before the World Cup,” Murali said. “Everything depends on how much my body can take. In Test cricket it’s a little bit harder because I have always been a threat to other sides [but] at the moment it’s not looking like that because others are playing me well. I think I made the right decision to retire from Test cricket at the end of the West Indies series next year.”Two to three years ago it was not like this. Now you have niggles here and there and my groin is not the same as it used to be. We got the worst bowling conditions in the last two Tests. We didn’t have the bowlers, that was one of the factors. But that’s the way cricket goes, everything won’t work in your favour.”Sri Lanka are struggling in the series because Murali has not been able to give them the breakthroughs he usually does. “I’ve played only eight Tests this year: two against Bangladesh, two against Pakistan, and two against New Zealand when I really did well bowling in the second innings of the second Test with a groin injury,” he said. “Whenever the side wanted a breakthrough I got it for them in the New Zealand series. I don’t know why it’s not happening here.”You have to give credit to India also for playing well. Whatever we were expecting didn’t happen. Even the spinners didn’t do well in any Test because everyone was not up to the mark and the wicket was not assisting them.”Sri Lanka are yet to win a Test in India, but Murali said that he won’t be too disappointed if he had to return home without a Test victory in India. “Every cricketer has to go through disappointments. Everything you want to happen in life won’t happen; something will be missing. Looking back I can say what an amazing career I have gone through but if we can’t win in India that’s it. Life has to go on.”Already the leading wicket-taker in Tests, he needs 12 more wickets in a possible three Tests to reach 800, but he said he was not targetting personal milestones. “I am not really focussing on finishing off my career taking 800 Test wickets. My focus is on winning matches. I don’t believe in numbers. Eight hundred is just a number everyone will forget once you retire. It’s a number to have in your mind. It is good if I get it but if I don’t, still I will be happy and go out knowing I had a great career.”

India name squad for U-19 World Cup

The BCCI’s junior selection committee announced the Under-19 squad to tour New Zealand for the World Cup, from January 15-30, 2010. Rajasthan’s Ashok Menaria, who led the side to Australia this year, will captain the 15-man squad.Notable names in the squad are those of Saurabh Netrawalkar and Sufiyan Shaikh, who were impressive during the BCCI Corporate Trophy.India, defending champions, kick off the tournament with a match against Afghanistan on January 15 in Lincoln. They will then play Hong Kong two days later in Christchurch, followed by their final game of the group stage against England on January 21. The top two teams in each group will progress to the quarter-finals.The squad will head to South Africa for a short series before the World Cup.India Under-19 squad: Ashok Menaria (capt), Mandeep Singh, Mayhank Agarwal, Akshath Reddy, Harpreet Singh, KL Rahul, Sufiyan Shaikh, Zahid Ali, Harshal Patel, Jaydev Unadkad, Sandeep Sharma, Saurabh Netravalkar, Harmeet Singh, Manan Sharma, Gaurav Jathar.

Pollard delivers President's Cup for T&T


ScorecardKieron Pollard followed his Champions League success with a Man-of-the-Match performance in the final of the President’s Cup•Global Cricket Ventures-BCCI

Kieron Pollard carried on his brilliant Champions League form with a Man-of-the-Match performance that carried Trinidad & Tobago to an 81-run win over Guyana in the President’s Cup final. Darren Bravo’s 76 and Pollard’s 57 set up an imposing 286 for 6 before Pollard grabbed three wickets in Guyana’s chase.For a while it looked like Ramnaresh Sarwan (59) might be the saviour for Guyana and he combined with Travis Dowlin (41) for an 89-run second-wicket stand. But the loss of Dowlin, caught at long-off, sparked a flurry of action as Trinidad picked up seven wickets for 37 runs, including all three of Pollard’s strikes.Pollard snared Narsingh Deonarine, caught behind for 2, and then picked up the key wicket of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who was caught at extra cover for a duck. The addition of Chris Barnwell, who skied Pollard to Lendl Simmons at long-on, completed an excellent all-round match for Pollard and he finished with 3 for 37.The collapse left the hosts at 129 for 8 and only a late 46 from Royston Crandon helped them gain any respectability. Their problems had started during the Trinidad innings, which was fluently anchored by the No.3 Darren Bravo, whose 76 came from 106 deliveries.Bravo combined in key stands with Simmons, Daren Ganga and Pollard, all of whom made valuable contributions as the Guyana bowlers battled to restrict the runs. Ganga’s 46 was followed by Pollard’s powerful 57 from 50 balls, and he had late support from Denesh Ramdin with an unbeaten 44.The victory confirmed Trinidad & Tobago as the team to beat in West Indies’ domestic limited-overs competitions. They impressed by reaching the final of the recent Champions League Twenty20 in India, where they were beaten in the decider by New South Wales.

Johnson is ICC Cricketer of the Year

Mitchell Johnson became the sixth player to win the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy after being named as the 2009 ICC Cricketer of the Year at the ICC Awards ceremony in Johannesburg.Johnson fought off stiff competition to take the award from fellow short-list nominees Gautam Gambhir and MS Dhoni, as well as England captain Andrew Strauss.Johnson follows in the footsteps of India’s Rahul Dravid (2004), Andrew Flintoff of England and South Africa’s Jacques Kallis (joint winners in 2005), Ricky Ponting of Australia (2006 and 2007) and Shivnarine Chanderpaul (2008) to take the top award.”I’m really blown away,” he said after receiving the honour. “I am just surprised to be up here. It has been a great 12 months for our side. We have lost some wonderful players in recent years and we have been rebuilding with some young guys in the team and we have played together well.”I’m enjoying the game at the moment – that makes all the difference. The highlight for me was actually my first century in a Test match. I would be quite happy to wear the tag of allrounder so I have been pleased with how my batting has come on. Also, winning in South Africa was a huge high for us.”I’d like to thank my team-mates, friends and family and my fiancée for putting up with the ups and downs over the last year or so.”ICC President David Morgan congratulated Johnson on his victory: “Mitchell has worked extremely hard over the past year to be an integral part of Australia’s bowling line-up and his effective batting style has turned him into one of the top all-round cricketers,” Morgan said. “His statistics for the last 12 months show how worthy a winner of this title he is.”I would like to extend my congratulations to Mitchell on winning the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy. He had some tough competition to overcome, the likes of Gautam, Mahendra and Andrew but no one can deny he has been a stand-out player over the past 12 months.”During the voting period, Johnson played 17 Test matches, taking 80 wickets, which was easily the highest number by any Test bowler in the voting period. His best match bowling figures were 11-159 against South Africa in Perth in December of last year and Johnson’s economy-rate over the whole period was a mere 3.12.His batting skills shouldn’t be forgotten either for in the last year he has managed to score a total of 632 runs for Australia, including a century and three half-centuries, to register an average of 30.09.Johnson also played 16 ODI matches in this time taking 28 wickets at an average of 24.25 and an economy rate of 5.06, his best haul being 4-34 against South Africa in April of this year. He is currently ranked third in the ICC Player Rankings for Test bowlers and is 11th in the ODI rankings.The Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy was one of eight individual prizes given at this year’s ICC Awards. Johnson also featured in the ICC Test Team of the Year as picked by the ICC selection panel.

Worcestershire's relegation confirmed

ScorecardIt was, perhaps, fitting that Worcestershire’s relegation should be clinched by another woeful batting performance.Their failure to secure a single batting bonus point here – the seventh time this season they’ve suffered such a fate this season – left them no hope of avoiding the drop and obliged them to follow-on for the fifth time in the campaign. For the third time, their experience of life in division one has lasted just a season.On the evidence of recent weeks, it may be some time before they’re back in the top division. With spineless batting and toothless bowling, their main aim now is only to avoid setting a new record for the lowest points tally in the history of two division championship cricket. Glamorgan’s tally of 88.5 – set in 2005 – suddenly looks rather large.The club management point to a decent showing in the Pro40 by way of mitigation, but there should be no concealing the extent of the club’s decline. While there have been some impressive displays in limited-overs cricket, there has also been defeat against Ireland. The fact that the main architect of their Pro40 success has been the departing Steve Davies is hardly cause for wild celebration, either.Instead the club should embark on a period of honest reflection. The management should stop blaming the greed of players for their desire to leave the club and instead listen to their concerns. As Oscar Wilde might have said, to lose one player is carelessness, to lose half a dressing room is a sign that something is rotten in the county of Worcestershire. Discontent is the first necessity of progress; there is scope for plenty of both at New Road. But by deluding themselves that success in the Pro40 masks the problems, the management are doing the club a disservice.Certainly there was little cause for optimism from the performance of Worcestershire’s batsmen in this game. At one stage they managed to lose 13 wickets for 95 runs in the space of 43 overs. Though there were periods of resistance, most notably from their opening batsmen in the first innings, they remain as brittle as a biscuit.Neither the pitch or the bowling provide a thorough answer. While Hampshire bowled well enough, most of the wickets were the result of feeble batting. Daryl Mitchell pushed at one angled across him, Stephen Moore played on as he attempted to cut one far too close to him, a crease-bound Vikram Solanki edged a good one that left him slightly and Ben Smith, who seems to remain in the XI through habit rather than merit, prodded forward hopefully and edged to slip.Imran Tahir, held back until the 47th over, struck with his first delivery when Alexi Kervezee lunged at another straight ball, before Steven Davies pulled to midwicket and the googly proved too much for Richard Jones and Matt Mason. It left Worcestershire 224 runs behind on first innings.It was no better second time around. Dominic Cork, reaping remarkable rewards for simply bowling straight, claimed three wickets for one run in 13 deliveries, as Mitchell and Solanki missed straight ones and Smith again prodded forward like a blind man reaching for a light switch that isn’t there. Moore impressed for a while, but when he pulled to mid-wicket, it left Worcestershire facing the prospect of a three-day defeat.From a Hampshire perspective, this was a much-improved performance. While victory would not ensure them of survival, it would ease their concerns considerably. Though they would admit they were somewhat flattered by the obliging nature of Worcestershire’s batting, they complemented each other well as a unit with David Griffiths, working up a sharp pace, and Tahir’s, turning the ball both ways with only subtle changes of action, particularly impressive.To add insult to injury, Hampshire are now picking over the bones of the Worcestershire side. Hampshire are interested in both Kabir Ali and Simon Jones and held talks with the former after play on the second day. Their interest must raise questions about the future of Chris Tremlett at the club, however. The fast bowler is currently languishing in second XI cricket. Warwickshire, Sussex, Durham, Nottinghamshire and Surrey are also all thought to be interested in talking to Kabir.

Not about proving a point – Dravid

Rahul Dravid’s limited-over career appeared to be over when India’s selectors plumped for youngsters in late 2007. But now, after a lengthy stint on the sidelines, the 36-year-old Dravid is back for next month’s tri-series in Sri Lanka and the Champions Trophy.He said he didn’t look at the recall as a chance to prove his detractors wrong. “I have never played my cricket that way, wanting to prove a point,” Dravid told the . “To me, it’s about trying your best to be the best you can be, day after day, in whichever format you are playing and for whichever team you are playing.”Dravid, who has had a long break after the IPL ended in May, said: “It’s nice to be back, I am very happy. I am looking forward to the Sri Lanka tri-series and the Champions Trophy in South Africa, to giving it my best. It will be nice to catch up with the boys once again.”Dravid has played 333 ODIs and is among a few batsman to have made over 10,000 runs in the format. “I will do my best for the team’s cause,” he said. “I have always believed in preparing well before a match or a competition and it will be no different this time.”

Slick Sussex claim Twenty20 Cup

ScorecardDwayne Smith kick-started Sussex’s innings with 59 off 26 balls•PA Photos

Sussex secured the Twenty20 Cup for the first time as their spinners followed up a hard-hitting display from Dwayne Smith, who clubbed 59 off 26 balls, to complete a 63-run thrashing of Somerset. When Marcus Trescothick launched Somerset’s pursuit of 173 the chase looked easy, but he fell for 33 and scoring became increasingly tough on a wearing surface.The victory compensates handsomely for Sussex’s Friends Provident Final defeat at the hands of Hampshire last month and they have also turned the tables on the curse of the first semi-finalists on Finals Day. Only on one previous occasion, in 2006, had the team winning the first semi gone on to claim the title. Sides have often found it difficult to lift themselves again after the downtime, but Sussex had no such problem.On a day when overseas and senior talent played leading roles, the performance of Will Beer, the 20-year-old legspinner, was worthy of many plaudits as he claimed two key middle-order scalps in a nerveless display. If it hadn’t been for Peter Trego, Beer’s figures would have been exemplary.Sussex’s bowlers were supported by confident catching – not always easy under the less-powerful floodlights – with Rory-Hamilton Brown steadying himself under three, including the crucial one of Trescothick. However, the pick of the catches came from the captain, Michael Yardy, who plucked out Zander de Bruyn’s drive at extra cover. With that went any faint hopes of a Somerset fightback. “It was a team performance,” Yardy said, “I don’t think anyone had a bad game.”However in the first four overs of the chase it was Sussex needing inspiration as Trescothick followed his semi-final 56 from 32 balls by smiting Luke Wright for 17 off his second over. He continued by launching James Kirtley over extra cover for six, but fell trying a repeat next ball and the game changed.Justin Langer was bowled heaving across the line and by the time spin was introduced the momentum was heading back to Sussex. Yardy and Beer stifled the scoring and desperate shots started to emerge. Trego briefly resisted before picking out long-on and, with the match in the bag, Kirtley returned to produce a triple-wicket maiden in the 17th over – two to the bowler and a run out. The last six wickets fell for five runs in 19 balls. A thrashing in any cricket.Despite the early loss of Murray Goodwin, Sussex had used the Powerplay reasonably to reach 47 for 1, but lost their way in the next four overs to slip to 80 for 4 when Ed Joyce exposed his leg stump with a paddle-sweep. However, Hamilton-Brown can count himself unfortunate that he was given lbw to Max Waller as the delivery was comfortably missing leg stump.The innings was revived by Smith who is unlikely to be available for the Champions League because Deccan Chargers, his IPL franchise, have first call. To add another twist, Deccan will now play Sussex during the tournament. Goodwin will also be absent, as he has to qualify post-ICL, and it is cruel for Sussex that their two key batsmen on Finals Day are out of service. But Smith’s position is something that will become more frequent as players join multiple sides.Smith hit hard and long to reach fifty from 23 balls, connecting as cleanly as Trescothick. He took a particular liking to Waller, but the legspinner held his nerve having been taken for 14 from the previous three balls to have Smith superbly stumped by Craig Kieswetter.However, when Yardy fell cheaply Sussex were in danger of wasting Smith’s effort. Then Chris Nash, fresh from a Championship hundred, adapted his game to hit 28 off 22 and Yasir Arafat added 20 off 13 balls as the pair put on 46 in the last five overs. It wasn’t quite a blitz, but it meant Somerset would have to achieve the highest success chase on Finals Day. For a short while it looked possible, but the spinners once again reigned supreme in Twenty20.