Morgan named captain for Ireland match

Eoin Morgan will captain England for the first time in career when he faces his former countrymen, Ireland, in a one-off ODI in Dublin next week.Morgan, who did not play in England’s sensational World Cup defeat against Ireland in Bangalore due to injury, will lead a new-look 13-man squad including several up-and-coming members of the England Lions, after the selectors decided to rest a number of its senior players ahead of the five-match ODI series against India later this month,Leicestershire’s James Taylor, Yorkshire’s Jonathan Bairstow and Durham’s Ben Stokes and Scott Borthwick all recently featured in the England Lions’ ODI series win over Sri Lanka A. None of them has yet been selected in a senior international, but with Alastair Cook, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, James Anderson and Stuart Broad among the key absentees, a draft of debutants can be expected in the fixture.”The squad we’re looking to take to Ireland involves a number of exciting young England players as we rest several players currently involved in the npower Test series against India,” said the national selector, Geoff Miller.”By resting several players that have played international cricket since the start of the summer the opportunity has arisen for a number of talented up and coming players to continue their development on the international stage. We know from previous encounters that Ireland are a tough ODI outfit and we’ll be fielding a very strong England side that will need to play well.”We’re also presented with the opportunity to provide Eoin Morgan with further leadership experience and I know he is very much looking forward to assuming the captaincy and developing his leadership credentials while in charge of a young England squad.”One senior player who will making the trip is Jonathan Trott, who has recovered from the shoulder injury he sustained during the second Test at Trent Bridge, and is expected to be fit to play. His replacement in the third and fourth Tests, Ravi Bopara, also makes the trip, as do Steven Finn and Graham Onions, the two unused fast bowlers from the Oval Test squad.Last week it was confirmed that Andy Flower, the team director, would also be missing the trip to Ireland. He will link up with the squad ahead of the Twenty20 international against India on August 31. In his absence, England’s assistant coach Richard Halsall will take charge.Morgan, who is England’s official Twenty20 vice-captain, becomes the fourth England captain of the 2011 summer, following on from the Test skipper Andrew Strauss, the regular ODI captain Cook, and Stuart Broad, the Twenty20 captain.It promises to be a tough baptism against an Ireland side who came uncomfortably close to winning their last bilateral fixture against England, at Belfast in 2009. That match, which took place in the immediate aftermath of the Ashes victory at The Oval, finished with England sneaking over the line by three runs, only after Morgan, fielding as a substitute at long-on, parried a Trent Johnston six back into play with one ball of the match remaining.Squad Eoin Morgan (capt), Jonathan Bairstow, Ravi Bopara, Scott Borthwick, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Craig Kieswetter, Graham Onions, Samit Patel, Ben Stokes, James Taylor, Jonathan Trott, Chris Woakes

Hussey expects Sri Lanka fightback

Michael Hussey, the Australia batsman, expects Sri Lanka to bounce back strongly from their opening ODI loss to the visitors. Sri Lanka had won the two Twenty20 games but were at the wrong end of a seven-wicket defeat at Pallekele on August 10.”It was very important to get off to a good start, particularly after losing both Twenty20s,” Hussey told . ”I think the Sri Lankan confidence was sky high, so it was important for us to start the series well. We’ve got to make sure that we are right on our game again because I’m sure the Sri Lankans will be coming back at us very hard.”The second game will be played at Hambantota on Sunday and Sri Lanka could be boosted by the return of fast bowler Lasith Malinga, who missed the first ODI and both T20s with a back injury.”He’s [Malinga] an outstanding bowler,” Hussey said. ”I think the reasons why he’s so good is that he can take wickets up front with the new ball. His action does take a little bit of getting used to, so that makes him dangerous as well. He’s got a very good slower ball, very good bouncer, and he also bowls very well with the old ball. One-day cricket is pretty much made for him and he’d be a vital part of their team.”Complementing him with their very good spinners gives them a very well-rounded team and we’re expecting them to really bounce back hard, so we’ve got to be ready for that and [get] right on top.”Hussey missed the T20s and was unbeaten on two when Michael Clarke hit the winning runs in the first game, so he is raring to get into the action. ”I’m champing at the bit really. It was a bit tough to watch the Twenty20s. I would have loved to have been involved in that. [But] it was good to come over while those games were on just to get a bit of an idea of what their bowlers were doing and how the wickets were going to play. Things like that.”

Auckland lobbying for Tests at Eden Park

Auckland Cricket is lobbying hard for Test cricket to return to Eden Park after having not had a Test match there since 2006. Auckland Cricket chief executive Andre Eade said he hoped New Zealand Cricket would change or make an exception to their policy of playing Test cricket at smaller, boutique grounds.Auckland’s domestic side will return to Eden Park outer oval at the start of the 2012-13 season, after having shifted to Colin Maiden Park in 2006 because the whole of Eden Park was undergoing renovation before the 2011 Rugby World Cup. Auckland Cricket were hoping to make the outer oval a Test venue but after the Eden Park Trust Board said they did not think it was financially viable to bring it up to Test standards, Auckland Cricket are now hoping to see Tests return to the main Eden Park ground.”Now we are coming back to the outer oval and Eden Park has indicated it can’t develop it in the immediate future, our position becomes simpler,” Eade told the . “We don’t think it’s satisfactory for Auckland not to have Test cricket. So there’s no alternative but for NZC to reconsider its policy, or grant an exemption to its policy.”We’re lobbying very hard – for commercial and population-basis reasons – that it is wrong there aren’t any Tests here.”After 2006-07, NZC decided to shift Tests away from traditional, larger venues like Eden Park, which has hosted 47 Tests, and the AMI stadium in Christchurch, which has hosted 40, to smaller stadiums as they felt crowds for Test cricket weren’t substantial enough to fill the bigger grounds. NZC chief Justin Vaughan said they still believed smaller grounds were more suited to Test cricket but they were mindful that New Zealand’s two biggest cities hadn’t hosted a Test in over four years.”The board has committed to reviewing the policy on international matches in the next few months,” Vaughan said. “We believe hosting Tests at boutique grounds is the best way to present Test cricket with its size and environs, but we’re also very mindful that we don’t have a Test venue in the two biggest cities in New Zealand.”

Pujara doubtful for remainder of IPL

Cheteshwar Pujara is in danger of missing out on the rest of the IPL season after injuring his knee while fielding in Royal Challengers Bangalore’s win against Kochi Tuskers Kerala last week. Pujara picked up the injury when his foot got stuck in the turf as he attempted a sliding save in the Chinnaswamy Stadium outfield. He played no further part in the game, though he managed to hobble back to the dressing room, refusing the assistance of a stretcher.A chat with the National Cricket Academy (NCA) physiotherapist, and some intial scans revealed that there was no swelling in the knee. Pujara has not travelled with his team to Jaipur for tonight’s game against Rajasthan Royals. He is currently in his hometown, Rajkot, and will return to Bangalore for an MRI scan later this week, after which the team management will take a call on his further involvement.This is not the first time Pujara has picked up an injury in the IPL. In the 2009 edition that was hosted in South Africa, he injured his left knee during a warm-up game in the lead-up to the tournament, and was forced out of action for six months. He managed to bounce back from that setback, and even forced his way into the Indian Test team on the back of a series of strong domestic performances. The timing of his injury, and the recovery time, could impact his participation in the upcoming tour of West Indies. The tour begins in early June, though the Test leg gets underway only on June 20.For the moment, Bangalore are not giving up on Pujara’s return. Ray Jennings, Bangalore’s coach, said that he would like to wait for the final scans before taking a decision. “There have been a few conflicting reports about Pujara’s status,” Jennings told ESPNcricinfo. “At first, it seemed quite serious, but now he feels a little better. We are awaiting the results of his scans at the NCA and will take a final call before the next game [against Kolkata Knight Riders on Saturday].”Pujara is a very good cricketer, and it will be a disappointment for him if he doesn’t recover. But it will open up opportunities for some of the other youngsters in the side.”Pujara has not had too many opportunities so far in the season and has scored only 34 runs in three innings in seven games, batting low in a powerful line-up. Despite the modest returns, Jennings recently suggested Pujara had the potential to replace the England-bound Tillakaratne Dilshan as an opener, but the injury has made things uncertain.Mohammad Kaif has been in and out of the Bangalore XI, and is the front-runner for Pujara’s lower middle-order spot. South African batsmen Rilee Rossouw and Jonathan Vandiar are the other candidates, though they are more likely to replace Dilshan at the top of the order.

Brown century increases Lancashire's advantage

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Karl Brown scored a maiden first-class century to help put Lancashire in charge of their County Championship match against Sussex after two days at Liverpool. The 22-year-old right-hander has been on the county’s professional staff since 2006 but is making only his seventh four-day appearance.He shared a fourth-wicket partnership of 180 inside 62 overs with Mark Chilton, whose 87 frustrated Murray Goodwin’s side as they looked to defend their first-innings total of 243 all out. Lancashire closed the day on 319 for 5 after 111 overs, a lead of 76.Brown was dropped on 82 at square-leg by Naved Arif off the bowling of Jimmy Anyon three overs before bringing up three figures off 177 balls. He hit a couple of boundaries in the same over to rub salt into the wound. His 114 off 236 balls, including 18 boundaries, was also the highest score by a Lancashire player in Championship cricket on this ground since Graeme Fowler scored 169 against Kent in 1987.Sussex had started the day brightly with the wickets of night-watchman Gary Keedy and Stephen Moore to reduce the home side to 64 for 3 in the 30th over. Keedy was caught at silly mid-off by Joe Gatting off the bowling of left-arm spinner Monty Panesar – later warned for running on the pitch – and Moore chopped on an attempted pull off the bowling of Amjad Khan.But they had to wait until midway through the evening session for their next success – that of Chilton, bowled by Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, ending his 184-ball stay at the crease. By that time, however, Lancashire had moved one run past Sussex’s total. Brown fell in identical fashion to Chilton five overs later, this time Anyon getting in on the act.Brown has been given the opportunity to start the season for the first time in his career due to his county’s failure to sign an experienced batsman during the winter months. In effect, he is the direct replacement in the batting order for last season’s overseas duo Ashwell Prince and Shivnarine Chanderpaul.His previous first-class best was a 72 against Oxford MCCU at the Parks last weekend, where Chilton also scored a century and a fifty. Lancashire beneficiary Chilton mixed defence with fluent strokeplay throughout his innings but the double strike at least provided Sussex with some joy in the final session.Anyon bowled an eight-over spell after tea, costing only 17 runs, to slow things down somewhat though Steven Croft (37 not out) and Tom Smith saw their side through to close with an unbroken partnership of 53.

Gloucestershire cruise to comfortable win

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A Gloucestershire team featuring five Championship debutants got off to a winning start with a comprehensive seven-wicket victory over Derbyshire at Bristol. Starting the day on 19 for 1, chasing a target of 146, the home side slumped to 34 for 3 before skipper Alex Gidman joined young opener Ian Cockbain in an unbroken partnership of 112 that ensured 21 points. Derbyshire had to be content with three.Cockbain’s innings made it a memorable match for the three Gloucestershire players making first-class debuts. Liam Norwell took six wickets in the first innings and David Payne five in the second. With Richard Coughtrie and Will Gidman also making their first appearances inthe Championship, new-look Gloucestershire could feel particularly pleased with their efforts.In last season’s corresponding match, their old guard failed chasing a target of only 125 to win in the final innings. That memory must have returned as Derbyshire struck two early blows on an overcast final day. Coughtrie had battled away for 26 balls to make only a single when his back foot defensive shot was beaten by Tim Groenewald and the bails were dislodged.That was 27 for 2 and seven runs later the experienced Chris Taylor fell to a shot he will quickly want to forget, mistiming a pull off Tony Palladino straight to Dan Redfern at midwicket. But Cockbain, who signed for Gloucestershire last autumn after impressing with MCC Young Cricketers, showed good application to bat through the morning session.Unbeaten on 10 overnight, he made good use of the square cut to capitalise on anything short and wide, while displaying an exemplary defence in moving to 46 by lunch. Alex Gidman was watchful to start with, but gradually accelerated to be unbeaten on 44 at lunch, which was taken at 107 for 3 with some dark clouds gathering.Happily for Gloucestershire, they had cleared by the resumption. Gidman was first to his fifty, with a glorious cover driven four off Greg Smith, his seventh boundary in facing 61 balls. Cockbain got to his half-century with a straight driven two off Steffan Jones in the next over, having faced 116 deliveries and hit five fours. The opener then had the honour of hitting the winning single off the third ball of the 42nd over.

Gooch believes title is within England's grasp

Graham Gooch, England’s batting coach, believes that the current squad has the character and ability to go one better than the teams he was involved with during his playing days, and lift the World Cup for the first time in the country’s history.Gooch played in three World Cups in the course of his 20-year England career, but lost in the final on each occasion – against West Indies at Lord’s in 1979, against Australia at Eden Gardens in 1987, and most gallingly of all, against Pakistan at Melbourne in 1992, when he was captain.”Winning a World Cup didn’t happen for me,” Gooch told reporters ahead of the team’s flight to Colombo for their quarter-final against Sri Lanka. “But it’s a great honour to be involved with the England side. When you come up as a youngster you dream about playing for your country. I was fortunate enough to do that – and now to be asked to help other players, who are representing their country, is a great thrill.”But as part of the management structure of the class of 2011, Gooch believes that the players who scraped into the quarter-finals are battle-hardened and ready to raise their games in the knockout stages of the tournament. The very fact that they had to fight so hard to escape from a tough Group B will, he feels, be to their advantage.”They’ve shown their fighting qualities and their resilience,” he said. “The objective was to get into the knockout stages. We’ve made that, we’ve scraped through, and we’re not going to look back. We’re going to look forward to the next challenge. I hope this team have got it within them to win the World Cup – and I’m convinced they have.””We know we can improve, we know we’ve got better cricket within our team. Our guys need to concentrate on that,” he added. “Each individual has got to commit to his game to be part of our team framework for the big match. We can get better, and if we do we have as good a chance as anyone else.”Often, success in World Cups is as much about peaking at the right moment as it is about sheer quality, as Gooch himself knows only too well, after his team set the standard for the 1992 tournament, only to run out of steam just as Pakistan were hitting their best form ahead of the final. Likewise, Australia had to overcome a dreadful start to their campaign in 1999, before sealing the title with a run of seven unbeaten matches in a row.Having shaded West Indies by 18 runs in Chennai, England’s challenge is now to win three games in a row, starting with Saturday’s showdown in Colombo. And before that match gets underway, there are plenty of selection posers for Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss to consider, among them Ian Bell’s potential shift up the batting order in place of Matt Prior.”Having opened the batting myself, I think it’s a special place to play – and I think every batsman should aspire to open the batting in one-day cricket,” said Gooch. “Why wouldn’t you want 50 overs to bat? Why would you want to come in halfway down? You want to set the tone. You want to set up the game. If you open the batting in one-day cricket, you have a chance to make a mark and set the direction of your team.”Either way, Gooch insisted that England would not be panicked into wholesale changes. “You look at each game individually,” he added. “Our batting fired in the early matches, then we’ve been short of a few runs on lower-scoring pitches in exciting games. We just need to get that quantity of runs to be competitive. Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss will look at the batting order, once we’ve seen the conditions, and decide what’s our best way forward.”

Edwards century puts Barbados on top

Kirk Edwards and Ryan Hinds dominated the opening day of the game to give Barbados the advantage over England Lions at the Kensington Oval in Bridgetown. Barbados had already made a steady start, with Edwards and Kraigg Brathwaite (43) adding 95 for the second wicket, before Hinds came to the crease. The pair then proceeded to build on that platform, adding a further 176, as Edwards ended the day unbeaten on 126 with Hinds on 80. Liam Plunkett and Jade Dernbach were the two successful bowlers, picking up a wicket each, while the rest toiled away for no reward.Denesh Ramdin set a West Indies first-class record with seven catches behind the stumps, and Trinidad & Tobago skittled Combined Campuses and Colleges for 131 on the first day of their match at the Sir Frank Worrell Memorial Ground in St. Augustine, Trinidad. T&T chose to field and Rayad Emrit and Shannon Gabriel quickly justified that decision by removing four of the top five batsmen with only 58 on the board. There was to be no recovery for CC&C, and they were dismissed for 131 from 39.3 overs. Emrit finished with 3 for 11, Gabriel took 3 for 73, and Amit Jaggernauth chipped in with 2 for 6. In reply, T&T stumbled to 45 for 2, with Kevin McClean striking two early blows.Jamaica struggled to a score of 177 for 6 against Winward Islands at the National Cricket Stadium in St. George’s, Grenada. A number of batsmen made starts, but none of them were able to push on, with former West Indies batsman Marlon Samuels’ 40 the best effort they could muster. Things could have been worse for Jamaica, but David Bernard and Chadwick Walton added an unbeaten 41 for the seventh wicket. The spoils were shared amongst five different Windward bowlers, who picked up one wicket each.There was no play on the opening day of the game between Guyana and Leeward Islands in Georgetown because of overnight rain.

Batsmen, Australians cash in during ground-breaking auction

At the end of the largest two-day sports ‘auction’ in the world, the Indian Premier League took the first clear, decisive step towards its fourth season. Ending months of controversy around the League’s own financial deals and its teams’ ownership holdings, the ten franchises finally shook hands with the 139 cricketers who will form the core of the high-profile domestic Twenty20 event that begins in India on April 8.Auction weekend in Bangalore oscillated wildly between extremes of spending, lavish as well as careful, and general sloppiness around its conclusion. What began with the first of four $2m signings on Saturday morning ended with Mohammed Kaif’s name finally pencilled into the IPL roster, after being met with silence across the floor not once, but twice on Sunday. Almost like a sudden afterthought, Kaif was hauled onto the IPL4 gravy train, the last cricketer aboard, concluding the 353-man auction used to reshuffle the League’s overall player pool.After a prolonged two-day display of corporate wealth, cricket tactics and Bollywood showbiz (in that order), which ran live on national television across India, teams were left dealing with either a shrunken wallet or depleted ranks. If Gautam Gambhir broke the $2m salary mark on Saturday, the relatively-unknown Australia allrounder Daniel Christian, who has played three Twenty20 internationals, was the highest-paid player signed up on Sunday, at $900,000 by the Deccan Chargers. Deccan now have 14 cricketers in their roster, and still have $2.13m left unspent from their $9m salary ‘cap’. Current IPL champions Chennai Super Kings filled 18 slots, of the maximum squad strength of 30, during the auction itself. At the other end are the Rajasthan Royals, who signed just eight cricketers (Rahul Dravid and Pankaj Singh the only Indians among them) at the auction and are now left with a mere $800,000. They have less than Christian’s wage to hire at least another 18 cricketers to field a competitive team in the IPL.Rajasthan and all the other teams must now find the remainder of their squad from among India’s domestic player pool, officially called the ‘uncapped’ players, who unofficially form the source of much confusion between the franchises. The uncapped players can only be paid a fixed sum depending on their experience in domestic cricket and there is doubt among franchises as to whether the guidelines imposed by the IPL governing council in this regard would, or indeed could, be legitimately followed.The first XI’s of many sides were signed on as much as possible on the first day of the auction itself, and the second was spent trying to fill in the overseas quota and the remaining gaps in team plans. If the first auction in 2008 was marked by the stampede to nab names that create spectator interest and a ‘fan base’, 2011 had the franchises, not the concept of ‘icons’ players, calling the shots. No takers then for some of the high-earning cricketers of the first phase of the IPL like Sourav Ganguly and Sanath Jayasuriya, nor the need to seek random, occasional short-game performers from overseas like Herschelle Gibbs, Mark Boucher, Jacob Oram or even the born-again Shivnarine Chanderpaul. Every soundbite that emerged on doting television channels talked about ‘youth’, the Twenty20 format, and the team’s ‘plans’ for the future.The heavy sums during auction weekend were spent on impact players, who are now expected to win matches single-handedly, as well as those men meant to serve as genuine multi-taskers. If the player on auction was Indian, a fat pay cheque was a given, regardless of the cricketer’s core skill. Gambhir was the highest-paid specialist batsman at $2.4m, closely followed by the allrounders Yusuf and Irfan Pathan, who between them picked up $4m.On the flat wickets, quick outfields and short boundaries of India, all long handles were welcomed. Of the top 25 earners from the auction (excluding the retained players), there are only six specialist bowlers: Dale Steyn at $1.2m, Muttiah Muralitharan ($1.1m), Johan Botha ($950,000), and Zaheer Khan, Sreesanth and Piyush Chawla (all $900,000).Yet, the 35 slots between $900,000 and $400,000 are full of bowlers, as many as 17, with Sunday’s frantic buying including happy contracts for more than half a dozen Indian seamers. It opened with Umesh Yadav’s astonishing $750,000 bid, Munaf Patel got $700,000 and Laxmipathy Balaji $500,000. Vinay Kumar was bought for $475,000, Ashok Dinda for $375,000 and Manpreet Gony went for $290,000. The younger Indian seamers – Abhimanyu Mithun, Jaidev Unadkat and Sudeep Tyagi – were separated by $10,000 between the $260,000 to $240,000 bracket. Ajit Agarkar signed on with Delhi for $210,000.The heavy presence of as many as six Australians – Darren Lehmann, Michael Bevan, Geoff Lawson, Geoff Marsh, Dav Whatmore, Shane Warne (player-coach) and David Shipperd – heading support staffs among the ten teams explains the signing of 38 Australians amongst the 87 overseas players who will compete in IPL4. The South Africans are next with 20 of their players getting contracts. The southern hemisphere’s cricket calendar works perfectly for both these nations’ players to accommodate the IPL into their schedule, even as their third rugby-playing partner New Zealand is unable to hustle its most competitive cricketers into the tournament.England’s best will always find themselves having to grapple between their domestic season, early international fixtures and the IPL. The West Indian dispute over the unsigned board contracts may be settled by the silence from the entire League towards cricketers from the Caribbean as a whole.While smaller nations may take some heart from Dutchman Ryan Ten Doeschate’s $150,000 contract with Kolkata, Bangladesh or Zimbabwe players’ entry into the IPL will still depend not on the team owners’ knowledge of the game, but on the open-mindedness of those in charge of a franchise’s cricket operations. Pakistan’s players’ entry, though, will have to rely on a thaw in both the political freeze between India and its neighbour, as well as the immovable timidity of the League.The final round of the IPL auction ended in farce as 28 players were put back into auction, ostensibly because they had been asked for by the franchises. Yet 13 of the 28, including eight international cricketers, were not bid for by a single franchise, with no explanations given as to why they had been put onto the list in the first place. The three biggest names left out of the auction – Ganguly, Jayasuriya and Chris Gayle – were not on the second list and will not be a part of IPL4. Ganguly and Jayasuriya may have missed out because of their age but Gayle’s omission is as inexplicable as the man’s own persona. Among those bid for as second thoughts were Jesse Ryder of New Zealand, Rusty Theron of South Africa, Adam Voges and Moises Henriques from Australia, and Dmitri Mascarenhas and Michael Lumb of England. A few first-class cricketers, known mostly to the overseas coaches who make up most of the franchises’ support staff, pulled in some surprise contracts right at the end.Only two more Indians made that final cut: left-arm spinner Murali Kartik and Kaif, whose name was suddenly called for the third time. He was one of the earliest on the leftover list to be called up again, but met with silence for the second time in a few hours. Third time around, Kaif drew bids from Pune, Deccan and Bangalore, and eventually went to the Royal Challengers Bangalore for $130,000. The auction finally drew to a close with the three groups of men and women who had been tossing around numbers for Kaif rocking back and forth with laughter. The heaviest wallets in Indian cricket had much to celebrate: for six weeks this summer, they will own and control the biggest and some of the most gifted names in the sport.

Crowe, Bond join NZC cricket committee

Former cricketers Martin Crowe and Shane Bond, along with Gerard Gillespie, have been included in the New Zealand board’s cricket committee as non-board members. The committee, which was established following the team’s 0-4 defeat in Bangladesh, includes the board’s chief Chris Moller, and members Stephen Boock, Rob Hart and High Court judge Sir John Hansen.The committee’s remit runs from the grassroots all the way up to the highest level. Crowe and Bond were added to provide expertise on elite cricketing matters, while Gillespie came in for his grassroots knowledge of the game.”The NZC board believes the formation of the cricket committee with the appointment of such highly talented external members is a very significant step, and recognises the need to harness the knowledge, experience and skills of the entire cricket family,” Boock said. “The objective of the committee is to assist the board to promote, develop and foster cricket in New Zealand by gathering information from all areas of cricket, combining it with the views of the committee and providing this information as advice to the Board.”The board refrained from making sweeping changes to the team following the Bangladesh debacle, but called on the players to lift their performance during the tour of India. Despite punching above their weight in the the three-Test series, New Zealand could not prevent top-ranked India from winning 1-0. The one-dayers that followed, however, did little to suggest an upswing in New Zealand’s fortunes and they presently trail 0-4, with one game to play. They have now lost their last ten completed one-dayers, a streak that began in August.

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