Ponting targets Gavaskar over behaviour

Ricky Ponting admits he has been reported “more than anybody” since becoming captain © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting said it was “high and mighty” of Sunil Gavaskar to complain about poor on-field behaviour as Australia’s captain questioned his role in India’s lack of recent Test success. Gavaskar said this week Australia’s recent losses to England and New Zealand had “gladdened the hearts” of the game’s followers.”There is not the slightest doubt that in the last decade or so the Aussies have been awesome in batting, bowling and fielding, which has taken them to the top of the cricketing ladder,” Gavaskar, who regularly highlights Australia’s poor behaviour, wrote in , a national weekly. “But they have also been awful in the way they have sometimes behaved on the field much to the chagrin of the traditional fans of the game.”Ponting, who will lead Australia in their opening World Cup game against Scotland on Wednesday, said teams that dominated for a long period did not have too many supporters and then targeted Gavaskar. “We all know the way he played his cricket, don’t we?,” Ponting said in The Australian. “If he is talking about us, what about the way India have played their cricket over the last few years?”India won three of 12 Tests last year while Australia were successful in their ten games. “I know who I would rather be going to watch,” Ponting told the paper. “Have a look at how many Test matches they have won. He [Gavaskar] has been a big part of that, he has been a selector and he has been on the coaching committee. They might want to start to look at the way they play their own cricket rather than looking at us.”Ponting admitted he had been reported “more than anybody” since becoming captain – he was found guilty of dissent twice in 2006 – but returned to Gavaskar and recalled his attempted walk-off at the MCG in 1980-81. “Given out lbw to Lillee, Gavaskar indicated that he had edged the ball on to his pad, and was so enraged that he wanted to forfeit the match, ordering his partner, Chauhan, to walk off with him,” the Almanack reported. India’s manager stopped Chetan Chauhan from leaving the field.”For him to go on about behaviour, not too many captains have dragged their teams off the field, either,” Ponting said. “I don’t mind if ‘Mr Perfect’ comes out and goes on about our team, I know we are all not perfect. We are not going to keep everyone happy 100% of the time. But for some of these guys that have done it all themselves, it’s pretty high and mighty for them to say that.”

England resume winning ways

England 183 for 9 (Taylor 62) beat New Zealand A 86 (Guha 3-9) by 97 runs
ScorecardEngland’s women got the New Zealand-leg of their tour off to a winning start with a 97-run victory over New Zealand A in Lincoln.Acting captain Claire Taylor’s 62 was the basis of the side’s 183 for 9, with a third-wicket stand of 107 with Jenny Gunn (47) providing the bulk of the runs. But there were alarms as they slid from 122 for 2 to 131 for 7, and it took cameos from Caroline Atkins (23*) and Stephanie Davies (25) to give the score respectability.New Zealand A were never in the race as they were skittled for 86. Even that represented a recovery as at one stage they were 36 for 7. Isa Guha grabbed 3 for 9 while Gunn and Charlotte Russell picked up two wickets each.”I’m really happy with the professional performance from the team,” Taylor said. “There are still areas for improvement with both bat and ball … losing five wickets for nine runs in the middle order and bowling too many wides.”

Mushtaq out for three weeks after knee surgery

Sussex’s members looked quizzically at one another when Mushtaq Ahmed’s name was not mentioned in the team to face Surrey at Hove. It was later revealed that Mushtaq, Sussex’s whirling legspinner, underwent keyhole surgery on his right knee on Wednesday.”We made the decision very quickly on the Wednesday morning,” Mark Robinson, Sussex’s cricket manager, said. “We were originally hoping that we would just play him in four-day cricket up to the Twenty20 window where he’d then have the operation.”However, on reflection, we felt it wouldn’t be right to compromise our strike bowler by having him playing in discomfort, so, with the amount of unsettled weather around and the fact our club surgeon said he could get him in that day, we felt it was the wisest decision to make. It is a routine operation that many sportsmen have and we are hopeful that Mushy will be back between two and three weeks.”Mushtaq was replaced by Ollie Rayner, the young offspinner, as play finally got underway at Hove after the first day’s washout.

Ganguly fights in rainy Melbourne

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Sachin Tendulkar pulls high over midwicket for six during his brief innings of 19 © Getty Images

Torrential rain limited the first day of India’s warm-up match against Victoria to one session, in which Sourav Ganguly survived some early wobbles to score a half-century and Rahul Dravid settled into the opening role. The rest of India’s top order struggled against Victoria’s fringe fast bowler Allan Wise before the Junction Oval was flooded by a sudden downpour that started as the players left the ground for tea.The rain was so heavy that the ground began to resemble a rice paddy, then as the showers became heavier it was more like a small lake. The groundstaff will face a major battle to have the field ready for play on Friday and, with further thunderstorms predicted for the next two days, India will have limited preparation in their only practice match ahead of the Boxing Day Test.At the close the Indians were 3 for 110 with Dravid grafting a typically determined 33 and Ganguly on 51. The pair added an unbeaten 72 for the fourth wicket in the two-and-a-half hour post-lunch period after the first session had also been lost to rain.Wise, Victoria’s tall left-arm fast bowler, did the damage with all three wickets, continuing his strong record against visiting international teams. Wise collected 5 for 25 in a one-day warm-up game against Sri Lanka in 2005-06, but has been overlooked for all but two of Victoria’s Pura Cup matches this season.He frustrated the vocal contingent of Melbourne-based Indian fans that dominated the crowd by removing Sachin Tendulkar, who hinted at a special innings but delivered only a cameo. A couple of well-timed drives against Peter Siddle failed to reach the boundary due to the slow outfield before Tendulkar gently leaned on a cover drive that went for four off Wise.The highlight was when the 200-centimetre Wise banged in a shortish ball that might have tickled the ribcage of a lesser batsman, but Tendulkar quickly positioned himself to lift it high over midwicket for six. Wise’s revenge came as Tendulkar tried to cut and inside-edged the ball – it should have been called a no-ball for over-stepping – onto his stumps for 19.That was the major reward for Wise in an effective opening spell that netted 3 for 20. In Wise’s first over, Wasim Jaffer miscued an attempted pull and was caught at mid-off for 0 by Victoria’s debutant Aaron Finch. Wise extracted some good seam movement and in his next over had VVS Laxman caught behind down the leg side for 1.India were 3 for 38 and it could have been 4 for 39 when Ganguly got a thick edge off Siddle that flew marginally wide of the gully fielder. Ganguly was tentative early but gradually adjusted to the conditions and struck consecutive fours off Bryce McGain’s legspin, the first lifted over midwicket and the second cut hard forward of square.Ganguly reached his half-century from 86 balls just before tea. Dravid was watchful early as his partners struggled, cutting and cover driving his only two boundaries off Siddle, who bowled a mixed spell.India’s innings did not begin swimmingly but their players nearly ended up swimming, as the rain bucketed down on the Junction Oval with Melbourne enduring a heavy thunderstorm in the morning. The start was delayed by two-and-a-half hours and when Mahendra Singh Dhoni went out for the late toss it became apparent India had sprung a surprise.For all the talk of Australia perhaps using a four-man pace attack in the first Test, it was India who decided to leave out their spinners for the warm-up game. Anil Kumble was rested and Dhoni duly won the toss and chose to bat when the umpires eventually determined play could get under way. The second day is scheduled to begin half an hour early, if the weather turns favourable.

How ponders what might have been

Jamie How reached his highest Test score but admitted: ‘I’ll be replaying that last over for quite a while’ © Getty Images
 

Jamie How couldn’t hide his disappointment at the close of play after falling eight runs short of a maiden Test century, but he took solace in the fact that his efforts had given New Zealand a fighting chance of a competitive total in the first Test against England at Hamilton.”It’s in the balance still,” said How, after New Zealand reached the close handily placed on 282 for 6. “We lost a couple more wickets than we’d have liked, but there were a few itchy moments out there. The England bowlers bowled well all day and it was a hard slog as shown by the run-rate. It would have been nice to cap it off, but tomorrow morning, in the first hour, it’s a big part of the game.”How burst into the limelight during New Zealand’s one-day series win, where he scored a remarkable century in the tied ODI at Napier, but his failure to emulate that effort today cleared grated. After going to the tea break on 90 not out, he survived just eight more deliveries as Monty Panesar turned one past his defences and into the hands of Paul Collingwood at slip.”You keep reminding yourself that if someone gave you 90 at the start of the day you’d be happy,” said How, “but it still hurts and I’ll be replaying that last over for quite a while. But hopefully not for too long.”Nevertheless, his innings was a distinct improvement on his previous efforts in Test cricket, in which he had managed a top score of 37 in six matches. “It’s been a bit frustrating,” he said. “I haven’t played well in Test cricket in my first few games and you see the stats come up and it’s a bit embarrassing to be honest. I’ll be working hard to put it right. I’m not a big stats person but it’s nice to get that highest score.”Despite his downbeat demeanour, How clearly felt that his international career had turned a corner following his success in the one-dayers. “It gave me confidence and form,” he said. “I like to give myself time, even in the one-dayers, so it was nice to dig in and let them come to you and bat for as long as you can today. I set myself up to bat late into that last session, but unfortunately it wasn’t to be.”New Zealand’s hopes of a big score now rest on the shoulders of Ross Taylor, who also produced his best score to date in Test cricket. Belying his one-day reputation as a big-hitter, he knuckled down for an unbeaten 54 from 121 balls, and How was impressed with his application.”It’s a work in progress, but I’ve not seen him that disciplined or that straight,” he said. “He stuck at it, and in such an unfamiliar way because he’s such an aggressive player. But he tempered that well.”

Watson might need to give up bowling – Buchanan

Shane Watson is a talented batsman but is constantly let down by his body © Getty Images

Shane Watson should consider giving up bowling in a bid to resume his stalled Test career, according to his former coach John Buchanan. Watson missed Australia’s opening matches at the ICC World Twenty20 with a hamstring problem and again broke down with hamstring trouble in his first game.Sitting on the sidelines is not new to Watson. He missed the entire Ashes series with hamstring injuries, the start of the Word Cup with a calf strain and has also dealt with back and shoulder problems during his international career. Buchanan said he hoped Watson did not have to become a specialist batsman but it might be the only way to keep him on the field.”It’s an avenue he’s going to have to explore,” Buchanan told the . “You would hope it doesn’t come to that for him. Everyone is feeling for him. He’s a hard worker and does everything he can to get his body right. He’s an intense character and he’s only 26, so there are ten good years of cricket ahead of him.”Buchanan said Australia should consider using Watson as an opening batsman at Test level. Watson has expressed a strong interest in partnering Matthew Hayden at the top of the order but Phil Jaques and Chris Rogers are almost certainly ahead of him in the queue.”There’s no doubt he has the technical proficiency to open the batting at Test level,” Buchanan said. “He’s proved it in domestic cricket which, given the standard of our domestic competition, is a good barometer for Test cricket.”Opening the batting would necessarily reduce the amount of bowling, if any, he’d have to do in the Test side. From that point of view, it would be a plus and ease his workload. You couldn’t expect him to open the batting then bowl 20 overs in a day. But Shane is a talented bowler and I hope it’s a path he doesn’t have to take.”Buchanan said the regularity with which Watson would return from an injury only to break down again must erode his confidence. “He probably goes on the field hoping he’s going to get through it okay,” Buchanan said.”You don’t want to have those sort of thoughts at this level of sport. You have to have complete confidence in your fitness and your body. A big factor for him now will be how he deals with it all mentally.”

Spearman out with broken foot

Gloucestershire opener Craig Spearman has been ruled out for six weeks with a broken foot as the club’s injury problems deepen. He picked up the injury during warm-ups ahead of the Friends Provident match against Ireland last Thursday.Scans revealed a broken bone and Spearman is now in doubt for the start of the Twenty20 on June 22. Steve Griffin, the club physio, said: “Craig has had an MRI scan, is currently in plaster and we will know more after seeing the consultant on Monday.”Spearman started the season with 249 runs in two Championship matches although his one-day campaign hadn’t got off the ground with 67 runs in three innings. His injury will leave Gloucestershire even more reliant on Marcus North’s contributions.This is the second serious blow in a week for Gloucestershire after captain Jon Lewis was ruled out for two months following surgery to remove floating bone fragments from his ankle.

Buchanan lashes out at 'stupid' Warne

John Buchanan on Shane Warne: “Why did he think he was bullet proof?” © Getty Images & Cricket Australia

John Buchanan has revealed that he had written to Shane Warne in the aftermath of his drug suspension just before the 2003 World Cup, asking him to “take responsibility and wear the consequences of his actions”. Warne had been handed a one-year ban for taking a banned diuretic which he claimed had been given by his mother in “totally innocent” circumstances.The Herald Sun reported that in his soon-to-be-released book If Better Is Possible, Buchanan had expressed disappointment over Warne’s stance and wrote, “How could he be so vain, so stupid, so self-centred to forget about the team? Why did he think he was bullet-proof?”I sent him a long email, the essence of which was that through his dismissal from the team he had been given a second chance that not all of us are fortunate enough to get. If he wanted to take it, he had the opportunity to take responsibility and wear the consequences of his actions.”Their relationship was perhaps at its frostiest after Buchanan criticised Warne’s fitness levels during the 2001 tour of India. Warne, on his part, has been a vocal critic of Buchanan and has been scornful of several of his training techniques such as the pre-Ashes boot camp in 2006.Buchanan also said that though the relationship between the two has never had “best buddy status”, he had huge respect for Warne’s achievements.

Sri Lanka get a shot at history

A win in Port-of-Spain will make Sri Lanka the first visitors to clean-sweep the West Indies © Getty Images
 

Match facts

Thursday, April 3, 2008
Start time 1000 (local) 1400 (GMT)

The big picture

A victory in the opening Test in Guyana has given Sri Lanka a golden opportunity to claim their first series win in the Caribbean. A win here would also give them a special record: they will become the first visiting side to complete a clean-sweep in the West Indies. Australia came close five years ago, when they won the first three Tests but a record-breaking chase in the final Test in Antigua snuffed out their hopes of a whitewash.Sri Lanka pulled off a 121-run win in the opening Test in Guyana, with Chaminda Vaas engineering the triumph with a splendid 8 for 109. It was their first Test win in five attempts, giving them a shot at an unprecedented sweep.The fact that a scheduled warm-up game was cancelled, owing to logistical reasons, is unlikely to dampen Sri Lankan spirits. Mahela Jayawardene has urged his side to go for a win while Chris Gayle, his counterpart, has plenty of problems with regard to team selection. It will no doubt be an uphill task but West Indies have a record to defend and plenty of pride to play for. The weather, though, might have the final say.

Form Guide – West Indies

Last five completed matches: LWLLLPlayer to watch: Amit Jaggernauth’s exclusion from the side for the first Test created a lot of controversy but he’s likely to win his Test cap in front of his home crowd. Jaggernauth’s chances were vastly improved with his match-winning performance in the final round Carib Beer Series match against Barbados last weekend. He is the highest wicket-taker in the tournament with 40 wickets at 14.40.

Last five completed matches: WWWDWPlayer to watch: Thilan Thushara offered steady support to the experienced bowling duo of Chaminda Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan with match figures of 5 for 129 runs from 37.5 overs. One among the long line of left-arm seamers to have played for Sri Lanka, Thushara made his Test debut on Sri Lanka’s previous trip to the Caribbean five years ago. He subsequently faded but grabbed the opportunity in the first Test to stake his claim for a longer tenure.

Team news

West Indies will be without allrounder Ryan Hinds, who has a hamstring strain. It means Sewnarine Chattergoon, now fully recovered from the illness, is set to make his Test debut ahead of Devon Smith. He is likely to open along with Chris Gayle. There could also be a rare sight of two specialist spinners in the West Indian squad with Jaggernauth in line to join left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn in the side. The other option was to pick Fidel Edwards as a third fast bowler to support Daren Powell and Jerome Taylor.Sri Lanka were sweating over the fitness of Prasanna Jayawardene, who missed the final stages of the Guyana Test because of a hamstring injury, but he is set to retain his spot. Ishara Amarasinghe remains an option, instead of Rangana Herath, but it’s difficult to see Sri Lanka making too many changes to the winning side.West Indies (probable XI) 1 Chris Gayle (capt), 2 Sewnarine Chattergoon, 3 Ramnaresh Sarwan, 4 Marlon Samuels, 5 Shivnarine Chanderpaul, 6 Dwayne Bravo, 7 Denesh Ramdin (wk), 8 Daren Powell, 9 Jerome Taylor, 10 Sulieman Benn, 11 Amit Jaggernauth.Sri Lanka (probable XI) 1 Michael Vandort, 2 Malinda Warnapura, 3 Kumar Sangakkara, 4 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 5 Thilan Samaraweera, 6 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 7 Prasanna Jayawardene (wk), 8 Chaminda Vaas, 9 Thilan Thushara, 10 Rangana Herath, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan.Umpires: Simon Taufel, Billy Bowden.

Pitch & conditions

Rain could play a part in the way the pitch behaves. Brian Davis, the groundsman, has spoken about a seamer-friendly track but things could be way different if West Indies choose two spinners. “Surely nobody wants all pitches to be built just for batsmen,” he said.Weather: The forecast isn’t too rosy with showers expected on the second, third and fifth days. The opening day could be overcast too.

Stats

  • If Sri Lanka win this Test, they would be the first visiting team to complete a clean-sweep in the Caribbean.
  • Shivnarine Chanderpaul is yet to score a hundred at the Queen’s Park Oval.

    Quotes

    “We want to get accustomed to the conditions in Trinidad. We’ll make sure we do all the hard work and challenge West Indies, and see if we can win this Test series 2-0.”
    Mahela Jayawardene“I believe that if we can remain positive and focus, we can win the Test. It’s a must win situation for us to square the series. We’ll try and see what Sri Lanka has to offer a second time around both in the batting and bowling, so it is just for us to return to the drawing board, and come up with a plan, and come prepared to play a tough Test.”
    Chris Gayle

  • Lorgat capable of ICC juggling act

    Haroon Lorgat has balanced politics and cricketing necessities, a telling quality for a future ICC chief executive © Getty Images
     

    Haroon Lorgat, 47, comes to the ICC with his most telling qualification being that he somehow managed to maintain some degree of selectorial integrity while operating within the confines and bizarreness of South African cricket’s politically-directed affirmative action policies. Lorgat headed South Africa’s selection panel from 2004 to 2007 when the team did not have the services of the maturing bunch of stars they do now, but their record was still impressive.Lorgat brought stability to selection after the often puzzling reign of Omar Henry, but it was a pity Lorgat and Graeme Smith could never quite hit it off. Their relationship was littered with arguments over whether players should be chosen when not 100% fit, and it all came to a messy head in Cape Town in November 2006 when TV cameras caught their argument at the toss in full and embarrassing technicolour.But Lorgat’s tenure showed that he could juggle both politics and cricketing necessities and that is surely a telling quality when it comes to heading up the ICC. Players called him a ‘liar’, administrators said he was ‘right’, and fans didn’t know what to make of him, which is about as good as you can hope for when your brief is, basically, ‘pick this team but tell them it’s for this reason, them that it’s for the other reason, and the others that it’s none of their business.’But his time as convenor of selectors represents only a small part of his involvement in cricket. Lorgat served on the 2003 World Cup organising committee and was also treasurer of Cricket South Africa, an obvious appointment given his background. He completed his accounting articles with Coopers & Lybrand, before going it alone for eight years. He joined Ernst & Young as a senior partner in 2002 and last year set up Kapela Investments with five other associates.The CSA chief executive, Gerald Majola, goes back a long way with Lorgat: “We made our debut together for Eastern Province. I was dropped straight away because I scored nought and one, but Haroon scored 49.”We played together from childhood, our first tournament together was the Under-19s in Cape Town in 1975. He was a stylish batsman and a good bowler too, more in the Polly mould in that he was containing and would always bowl a good line and length. He was a top-order batsman and medium-pace bowler, one of our best allrounders in fact.”Majola’s backing was similarly effusive for Lorgat’s position as the ICC’s chief executive. “I have no doubt he will make a success of the ICC job, he has very good business acumen and he was Cricket South Africa’s treasurer for a while. He will do a good job because he understands the game and is passionate about it.”Lorgat’s heritage, a South African of Indian descent, is another reason why the ICC seem in a rush to pick him as their new CEO. A thoughtful, level-headed man, Lorgat will be expected to bridge the divide between East and West in cricket’s corridors of power.Currently based in Cape Town, Lorgat was a left-hand batsman and a right-arm seamer who scored 2813 runs and took 191 wickets in 76 first-class matches. He is married with a son and a daughter.

    Game
    Register
    Service
    Bonus