Ramnarine should heed Gordon's remarks

Many West Indians hold fast to the view that they have been betrayed by players who seek first to fatten their pockets and only then to do the work necessary to achieve world standards © Getty Images

What role does the West Indies Players Association (WIPA) and its president, in particular, ascribe to the organisation in West Indies cricket? Mr Dinanath Ramnarine will no doubt answer that, as the players’ representative body in negotiations with the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB), his mandate is to secure the best interests of the people who employ him.That would be a correct conclusion but only so far as it goes since West Indies cricket, perhaps more than any other regional institution, is more than simply a matter between the board and the players. The rights of the West Indian populations who have supported their team through good times, as well as bad, have to be taken into consideration.This means that the WIPA has to see itself as being a trade union and more in the sense of having to reflect always on what damage, if any, its statements and actions are doing on the present and future prospects of the Caribbean’s acclaimed version of the game.Moreover, Mr Ramnarine would do well to consider that even as the players continue to receive packages superior to those of the stars of yesteryear, who did so much to raise the region’s sporting status, the assessment made about them, both here and abroad, has never been worse.Many West Indians hold fast to the view that they have been betrayed by players who seek first to fatten their pockets and only then to do the work necessary to achieve world standards – even if then. In their reckless zeal in pursuit of fortune, if not fame, the players, fronted by Mr Ramnarine and his old-style trade union advisers, seem bent on confrontational bickering.It is in this context that we wish to draw Mr Ramnarine’s attention to outgoing WICB president, Ken Gordon’s charge that his abusive and threatening attitude has only served to stymie attempts to have the two bodies work together for the good of West Indian cricket.Mr Gordon has suggested to the WIPA president that the latter should engage in some honest self-analysis of his own style rather than seek comfort in the view that it is the style of everybody else which is wrong. The least Mr Ramnarine could now do is to consider, in a spirit of humility, whether Mr Gordon’s assessment has any merit or whether he just happens to be always right.

Pakistan start favourites in rematch

Andrew Strauss prepares for his first Test as England captain © Getty Images

A series between England and Pakistan rarely passes off without incident. In the past there has been Mike Gatting’s finger-wagging at Faisalabad, Aaqib Javed’s bouncers at Old Trafford and Saqlain Mushtaq’s missed no-balls at the same ground. More recently Shahid Afridi showed his dancing skills in the middle of the pitch last winter. That series ended 2-0 to a committed and talented Pakistan team as England’s Ashes hangover began to set in. The rematch is shaping up to be a tasty encounter.Already there have been plenty of incidents to talk about and the tour is barely two weeks old. Pakistan were less than impressed at how their warm-up match against England A developed into a meaningless draw, England have a stand-in (and third choice) captain who has just lost five ODIs on the bounce, while the pace bowlers on both sides continue to drop like flies.Pakistan have moved into second place in the rankings after England’s 1-1 draw with Sri Lanka and start the series as marginal favourites. But Inzamam-ul-Haq said England “were still a good team” before adding: “It doesn’t matter where you are in the rankings. Every series is a new series and if you play good cricket you’ll win.” And Pakistan are not at their strongest with Mohammad Asif ruled out and Shoaib Malik (elbow) and Younis Khan (knee) doubtful.”Unfortunately he hasn’t reacted properly to the injection he had so he will be out,” said Bob Woolmer, the Pakistan coach, regarding Asif and then added about Malik: “He’s struggling. He had a cortisone injection last night so it depends what happens to it as a reaction.”However, Andrew Strauss, in his first pre-Test press conference as captain, was well aware of Pakistan’s threat. “The thing about the winter was their unpredictability. They can turn a game round in one session and you can’t afford to relax against them.”Despite the distractions of injuries and all the talk over the captaincy situation, Strauss is ready to lead his country. “The selectors have shown a lot of consistency. Fred [Flintoff] obviously captained the side very well in India and did a good job against Sri Lanka. I’ve said all long I’m very happy to do the job if other people feel I’m the right man to do it. There’s no leadership contest or anything like that.”Strauss will have to have his wits about him, the opening encounter is vital. Pakistan have been shorn of their two leading strike bowlers, Shoaib Akhtar and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, for most of the series while Asif misses this Test. But quick bowlers – with the ability to swing the ball both ways at pace – grow on trees around the streets of Lahore and Karachi and they have solid reserves in Mohammad Sami and Umar Gul. Pakistan’s trump card, however, is Danish Kaneria who bamboozled England in the winter and will enjoy the drying pitches and extended warm spell.Despite their injury problems, Inzamam is confident in his team: “The batting is more experienced than the bowling and if we put a big score on the board we have a chance to win this game.”

Spin king: Danish Kaneria is Pakistan’s key weapon in the absence of Shoaib Akhtar and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan © Getty Images

England, too, are in the position – a familiar one to them – of having to patch-up their bowling attack. It’s a case of gaining one and possibly losing yet another. Steve Harmison is back but Matthew Hoggard is still a doubt and a decision won’t to be made until the final minute. With the warm weather around, Monty Panesar will have a key role. “If he [Panesar] can go at two an over in India against their batsmen, it proves he’s pretty tricky to get away,” said Strauss, “so if people do go after him, he’s got more chance of taking wickets.”Undoubtedly the strength of both sides is in the batting. If Pakistan so desire they could have Kamran Akmal as low as No. 8 although the loss of Malik and Younis would cause some problems. Salman Butt and Faisal Iqbal will come in at the top of the order if both the others are ruled out.England’s top-order oozes runs, or at least it should do. It only performed in fits-and-starts against Sri Lanka, usually relying heavily on Kevin Pietersen and Marcus Trescothick. With the captaincy armband, Strauss needs to rediscover the art of making Tests centuries while Paul Collingwood and Ian Bell are probably fighting over one spot when Flintoff returns and must convert starts into substance.It is impossible for England not to look ahead but, while the wheels have not come off the Test side in the same way as the one-day team, they are starting to look distinctly wobbly. They know the winter challenges but must forget what is happening in four months time. It is the here and now which is important and that starts at Lord’s tomorrow morning.England (probable) 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Andrew Strauss (capt), 3 Alastair Cook, 4 Kevin Pietersen, 5 Paul Collingwood, 6 Ian Bell, 7 Geraint Jones (wk), 8 Liam Plunkett, 9 Matthew Hoggard/Jon Lewis, 10 Steve Harmison, 11 Monty PanesarPakistan (probable) 1 Salman Butt, 2 Imran Farhat, 3 Faisal Iqbal, 4 Mohammad Yousuf, 5 Inzamam-ul-Haq (capt), 6 Shahid Afridi, 7 Abdul Razzaq 8 Kamran Akmal (wk), 9 Mohammad Sami, 10 Umar Gul, 11 Danish Kaneria

Ben Smith extends Worcestershire deal

Ben Smith has agreed a two-year extension to his existing contract which will take him to the end of the 2008 season. Smith is in his fourth season with Worcestershire since moving from Leicestershire and recently scored a century in three successive championship matches.”I have made it no secret that I would like to finish my career with Worcestershire and I am delighted that we have agreed to this contract extension,” said Smith. “It gives me some future security and I can concentrate on helping the team achieve the success it is due.”

India clinch an historic win

India 675 for 5 dec (Sehwag 309, Tendulkar 194*, Yuvraj 59) beat Pakistan 407 (Hameed 91, Inzamam 77, Pathan 4-100) and 216 (Youhana 112, Kumble 6-72) by an innings and 52 runs
Scorecard

Virender Sehwag, Anil Kumble and Sachin Tendulkar played sterling roles in India’s first-ever Test victory in Pakistan© Afp

It took India just 12 balls on the final morning to put the lid on their historicmaiden Test win in Pakistan. If Rahul Dravid, leading the side in Sourav Ganguly’s absence, had sat down and written a script for his dream Test match, it would have been exactly as this one played out. Pakistan were bowled out for 216 after following on, and India won by an innings and 52 runs. After 52 years of India-Pakistan encounters, 49 years after India first toured Pakistan, they could finally savour the sweet taste of victory here.And it was sweet. For the team had come together spectacularly over four days and a bit. When the final wicket fell, every member of the team rushed towards the stumps at both ends. Within minutes only the two stumps that housed cameras were left standing. Instinctively the team gathered in a huddle and began to jump up and down, unable to contain their joy. The huddle, which has become a feature of Indian cricket in recent times, was on display again. Some consider it to be an ostentatious display of team spirit and unity, but at the moment it’s working for India.But, winning a Test is not merely about huddles. It’s about sticking to a plan over a period of time and delivering the goods. For India Anil Kumble and Irfan Pathan did just that over two innings on a wicket that had nothing in it for the bowlers. And it was fitting that this pair bowled the last two overs of the match.Kumble began the proceedings on the final day, and bowled from around the wicket in an attempt to exploit the rough created by the fast bowlers’ follow-throughs. Yousuf Youhana played out the over safely, and stole a single off the last ball to retain the strike. Pathan was given the ball to send down the second over and he continued to bend his back and put in maximum effort. Youhana struck one gorgeous boundary back down the pitch, and just for a moment it appeared as though he was prepared to go after the bowling.Pathan then banged the fifth ball in short and Youhana swayed out of the way. Pathan repeated the exercise with the last ball and this time Youhana (112) had to play a shot in order to try for a single to keep the strike. He miscued his pull shot, and Dravid called early to get under the catch that sealed India’s win .This win is all the more significant as it comes in the first Test of a series. India have won solitary Tests in Dhaka, Bulawayo, Kandy, Port of Spain, Leeds and Adelaide before this one in Multan, but none of those wins, barring the one-off Test against Bangladesh, have resulted in series victories. This triumph gives India an excellent chance of winning a series overseas.

Fletcher optimistic about England's prospects

After England’s five-wicket victory over Northern Districts at WestpacTrust Park in Hamilton, England coach Duncan Fletcher spoke to the press about the two warm-up games and England’s readiness for the One-Day International series against New Zealand. He began by assessing his team’s performance over the weekend.”It was quite a good work out, but I still think that we should have won the first game. [Simon] Doull batted well, but our bowlers didn’t think about what they were doing. They didn’t think about their variations enough. When someone is going like that you’ve got to vary it. It’s all about decision-making.”We had a really good chat with them one-on-one yesterday and they came out today and gave quite a bit of thought to it.”Andrew Flintoff was the first individual to be mentioned after his three for 20 and blistering 25-ball 45 that finished off the match today.”He can change the game in a couple of overs and put the pressure back on the fielding side and that is important in one-day cricket. It’s not always going to come off and we must be careful not to build him up too much. A couple of failures and everyone’s jumping on him. It’s going to be slow progress, but its nice to see the way he’s thinking about putting his shots together.”Work in the nets earlier in the tour has helped Flintoff with his batting.”It is a confidence thing, but we worked something out in India about his set-up and it seems to have paid dividends. At one stage he was a little bit lost with his footwork, but he now seems to have got that right.”Fletcher agreed that Middlesex batsman Owais Shah has impressed in both warm-up matches after missing out on selection in India. Will he come into the selection equation for the ODI series?”We won our last two games in India so it would be pretty strange to suddenly change the side around but it is pleasing to see that we have that depth. Shah batted very, very well today.”Fletcher was asked about the indifferent performance of Andy Caddick in the two games in Hamilton.”Caddy will realise that he’s a far better bowler than those performances, but he’s a good player who will come good on the night.”Was Caddick striving to impress too much on his return to the country of his birth?”Perhaps he’s trying too hard,” Fletcher suggested, “You never know what’s inside a man’s mind.”The coach was pleased with Craig White’s return to the side after missing the series in India because of a knee operation. Will he be fit for the ODI series?”I think that he will be fit enough. He bowled well in both matches, but I think that its important that he gets some runs as well and plays as a genuine all-rounder.”With Marcus Trescothick taking the gloves in the first match here and James Foster still short of living up to his promise, it has been suggested that the Somerset player will take over behind the stumps for the international series. Fletcher refused to commit himself on selection issues, but dropped a clear hint.”Trescothick’s got enough to do opening the batting. We don’t want him to start having to think about his ‘keeping and then take his eye off the ball when he’s opening the batting.”Fletcher assessed the forthcoming series in terms of preparation for the World Cup, which will be under way this time next year.”We’re a very inexperienced side, so every game we play is important. We haven’t played enough ODI cricket, but we have a heavy programme from here on in, which is good. The only trouble is how we pick the side. Do we tinker with it to give everyone a fair chance or do we try to stick with eleven so that they get enough games in before the World Cup?”He agreed that it would be a close series.”New Zealand will be very competitive. They are keen to beat England and always seem to raise their game against us. They have a lot of energy which is important in one-day cricket. They look to be a very tight unit.”The five-match ODI series begins in Christchurch on Wednesday.

Three in a row as Gloucestershire take B&H Cup

Somewhere, W.G. Grace is smiling. Gloucestershire have been transformed from a weak, unfashionable county to the premier force in one day cricket. The team famously described by the `elite’ in the England side as `Minor Counties West,’ are alive and kicking, very, very hard. The current Gloucester team boasts neither Jessop or W.G., nor Hammond or Walsh, but it was with a fantastic team effort from a spirited county that they crushed Glamorgan by seven wickets to lift the Benson and Hedges Cup.The victory was Gloucestershire’s third consecutive win in a Lord’s showpiece final, an unprecedented feat. The west-country county beat Yorkshire in the Super Cup Final, and Somerset in the Natwest Final last year, the most successful in the club’s history. Having sealed a win yesterday, they have won three of their five trophies in less than twelve months.Few thought that it would be so easy yesterday. An estimated 11,000 Welshmen had journeyed to the capital to support Glamorgan. A groan went through the ranks of Gloucestershire supporters when the news came that Glamorgan had won the toss, choosing to bat. In the past few years, Gloucestershire have struggled to chase runs, preferring to unleash their seamers having scored amid-range total. Glamorgan too, have a propensity to collapse under pressure, so would have been delighted to secure first knock on a cracking looking pitch.Robert Croft and Matthew Elliott opened up for Glamorgan, on a glorious sunny day, but soon both were back in the pavilion. Croft, batting obscenely out of his crease, trying to combat the seam of Ian Harvey, hit a leading edge, brilliantly caught by Jon Lewis at mid-off. An ecstatic Harvey picked up the wicket of his Victoria buddy Elliott, flattening the left-hander’s leg stump. New man Mike Powell struggled initially, struck several times in the box and on the finger by Smith, who was mixing mediocrity with brilliance to provide an interesting cocktail.Still, Glamorgan were not going to lie down. Matthew Maynard looked a world apart, as he timed the ball from the beginning of his innings. A push through mid-wicket went top the fence, as did a scorching pull, with Lewis suffering badly. Maynard bought up his half-century with a slashed drive backward of square. Powell too, was beginning to find some form, timing the ball well and scampering between the wickets. One criticism that could be levelled at the Welsh is that they did not accelerate enough to take the game away from Gloucestershire, or even to gain much of an initiative. It was to cost them dear. Snape picked up Powell two runs short of his 50, caught and bowled by a Jeremy Snape quicker ball. Powell and Maynard had added 137, and it was Adrian Dale that came to the crease, to try and keep the run-rate up.Dale ran himself out for five, as a clatter of wickets began to fall. James Averis, who was bowling another cracking spell – his eventual figures of 2-49 did him no justice – broke Steve James’ off stump in two. Keith Newell mis-hit a Harvey full toss to mid-off. Keeper Adrian Shaw hit Averis low to Barnett at mid-on. Alex Wharf was plumb leg before, and Harvey claimed hisfifth wicket, bowling Steve Watkin.In between the wickets, Maynard reached his century, a wonderful innings peppered with drives and pulls, tempered only given that he lost the strike toward the end of his knock. He was the last man out, for 104. It was an innings which eventually won him, perhaps unfairly, the gold-award. 225 was certainly a competitive total, but Glamorgan were restricted by some fine fielding – particularly Hancock and Snape – and bowling, led by Ian Harvey, who finished with 5-34, completely flummoxing the Glam batsmen late on.If Gloucestershire wished for a solid start, they would have fallen short of the mark. For they got a sensational start from Tim Hancock and Kim Barnett. Barnett drove his first ball through the covers for four, whilst Hancock pulled twice to the fence in Watkin’s first over. The openers continued in this vein, for 80 glorious runs in a touch over 15 overs. Barnett was the first to fall, edging a wide one from Croft onto his stumps, gone for a fine 39. The new man was Rob Cunliffe, and he set off where Barnett had left off.Cunliffe hit three boundaries in his all too short knock of 24, he and Hancock motored between the wickets. Cunliffe went with the score on 118, after edging a Steve Watkin lifter through to Adrian Shaw.Meantime, Hancock had reached his half-century. The 28 year old had played a fine knock, and helped to set up a Gloucester win. He fell on 60, a diving grab from Owen Parkin.At 131-3, Gloucester were wobbling just slightly. Although it took Windows and Alleyne a while to get in, they were soon playing commanding innings. Windows launched himself at anything short, punishing Dale and Wharf in particular.Alleyne was content to give Windows the strike. By the time Windows had reached his half century, Gloucestershire had done the necessary. Mark Alleyne hit the winning strike, hitting nonchalantly through the leg side. Gloucestershire had won by seven wickets, with 19 balls to spare.They may have won three trophies in a year, but the celebrations were just as raucous. The crowds still cheered when Russell lifted the trophy, cheered for Alleyne, for Martyn Ball, the most spirited 12th man in the country, for Mike Smith, for Ian Harvey. In short, the fans were cheering for a squad nurtured and developed by their excellent coach John Bracewell. The day leaves just one question, when will Gloucester be back at Lord’s.

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.”

Rangers had a ‘mare over Veerman transfer

Rangers have not been reluctant when it comes to spending money to bring new players to the club over the past few years.

However, one player with whom the Gers were linked in recent memory but didn’t end up making a move to Ibrox is Joey Veerman, and missing out on him could now be a great source of regret for the Light Blues.

Back in April 2021, The Scottish Sun reported that Rangers were interested in signing the Dutch midfielder from his previous club Heerenveen.

The 23-year-old, who has been described as a player who “looks beyond his years” by coach Robert Molenaar, ended up staying where he was last summer before eventually making the move to PSV Eindhoven in January in a deal worth a reported €6m (£4.9m).

In his 18 league appearances for Heerenveen in the first half of the current campaign, the midfielder scored three goals and provided six assists, earning himself an overall performance rating of 7.32/10 from WhoScored, making him their second-highest rated player.

Things have just been as impressive for the 23-year-old since joining PSV, having scored two goals and provided four assists in just nine league appearances, earning an overall rating of 7.29/10 to become third-highest rated player at the club according to WhoScored.

Taking all this into account, it’s safe to say that Ross Wilson dropped the ball by not securing a deal which would have seen Veerman join Rangers, based on what he has done on the pitch for Heerenveen and PSV this season.

Given the midfielder’s young age and the fact that Rangers currently have the likes of Aaron Ramsey, Scott Arfield and Steven Davis in their squad – who have all hit the age of 30 and are set to become free agents at the end of the season – Veerman could have been an ideal long-term midfield option for the Gers and would have been worth the investment.

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Alas, it seems as though the Ibrox club will just have to live with their mistake and hope that they don’t miss out on any other reported transfer targets when the opportunity presents itself to strike.

In other news: Van Bronckhorst’s £3.6m-rated “leader” can be Rangers’ “real handful” in Old Firm

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.

Board condemns unrepentant Gayle

Chris Gayle: unrepentant © Getty Images

West Indies’ tour of England has been plunged into further crisis with just two days to go until the Twenty20 internationals at The Oval, after Chris Gayle, the one-day captain, was condemned by the West Indies Cricket Board for refusing to back down from his recent criticism of the team’s shambolic tour arrangements.Gayle, who had already been smarting from the board’s initial vetoing of his appointment as one-day captain, hit out in his Cricinfo diary after the squad was forced to draft in five players from the local leagues to make up the numbers for their tour match against England Lions at Worcester last Thursday. The one-day specialists in the squad did not arrive from the Caribbean until the morning of the match, and so were unable to take part in the match.”The WICB says they want the best out of players but we also need the best out of the board,” said Gayle in his diary. “The board is always talking about players needing to change but we, the players, need changes from the board as well. We can’t be out in the wilderness all the time because we are the ones who are getting all the blame.”Gayle’s stance drew a sharp response from the board. Ken Gordon, the president, and Michael Findlay, the team manager, met with him on Monday for “lengthy discussions”, advising the player that his statement was “ill-advised and has caused unnecessary embarrassment to the WICB.” Gayle, however, was unrepentant and, in “a very strongly-worded letter of reprimand” was advised by Gordon and the board that his conduct was “totally unacceptable”.The matter is unlikely to end there, with the WICB threatening to pursue things further at the end of the tour. “The WICB is hopeful that notwithstanding his unwillingness to apologise, Mr. Gayle will understand the seriousness of his actions and avoid any further statements or behaviour that will force the WICB to take drastic and immediate action against him.”The intensity of the stand-off will only serve to deepen the resentment currently brewing in the West Indian camp. None of the senior board members were present during the 3-0 Test series defeat, and Gordon is only in the country to attend this week’s ICC meeting.Following an arbitration panel’s ruling last week which means that the WICB faces having to negotiate the contracts for this tour retrospectively, this public carpeting of one of their most senior players is an indication that those contracts are unlikely to be favourable to a team that, rightly or wrongly, feels it has been cut adrift by its paymasters.

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