Vettori asks for reduction in meaningless ODIs

New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori has asked for a reduction in the number of meaningless one-dayers, especially in extended bilateral series. His statements have come at a time when the ICC is reviewing the Future Tours Program, with plans to conduct a one-day league running over four years.”Why are we playing these extended one-day series?,” Vettori told the . “What’s the point? Hopefully the ICC follows these proposals through because I’d like to have more riding on every game. The number of games needs to be reduced so fans enjoy them more again.”Despite New Zealand’s forgettable 2010 – the team won only one Test, and suffered one-day whitewashes in Bangladesh and India – and his own age, Vettori was keen on carrying on after the 2011 World Cup, where he is expected to lead the side.”I am keeping my options open [after the World Cup],” Vettori said. “It’s incredibly difficult when you make a statement, as I originally did a long time ago that I was going to give up the captaincy. I think it’s better to play your cards close to your chest and, when the timing is right and you get the right feeling about things, you make decisions from there. At this World Cup I’ll only be 32, so hopefully there is plenty of cricket left in me.”New Zealand’s on-field woes led to changes at the top, with Mark Greatbatch making way for John Wright as the team’s coach. Vettori said the rebuilding phase was made easier by the team’s familiarity with Wright.”Most of the guys have had few dealings with John, apart from the odd time he’s popped into camps under previous coaches,” Vettori said. “The feedback so far is positive. He’s passionate about cricket and is one of the few people who can make you love the game again. Sometimes it can be a long time out there in the field; it’s challenging, but he has an ability to reinvigorate that passion, even in older players.”Obviously John’s a folk hero and people respond well to any change when things aren’t going to plan. He’s even one of the few guys I imitated growing up as a left-hander, muttering a few words under my breath every ball as well.”

Ganguly to play Ranji Trophy to prepare for IPL

Former India captain Sourav Ganguly is set to play in the Ranji Trophy for his state side Bengal, in a bid to attain top form and fitness ahead of IPL 2011. He will turn out in the match against Tamil Nadu that begins in Chennai on December 1.”Even last year I played Ranji Trophy mainly to stay match-fit for the IPL,” Ganguly told ESPNcricinfo. “This year again I want to keep myself in form for the IPL.”Ganguly retired from the international game in 2008, but continued to make sporadic appearances in the first-class scene, in addition to being an integral part of Kolkata Knight Riders’ plans in the IPL. He said he would decide how many games he would play this first-class season based on Bengal’s position going forward.Going into the fifth round of the league phase, Bengal are fifth out of the eight teams in Group A. Ganguly’s return will bolster the team that is likely to be without a few of its first-choice players for the potentially tough match against Tamil Nadu. Wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha will be unavailable since he is away on India duty, while reserve keeper Shreevats Goswami is down with viral fever.

Western Australia strike between showers


ScorecardOnly 4.1 overs were delivered on the opening day in Adelaide but it was enough time for South Australia to lose the opener James Smith. The Redbacks were 1 for 3 when play was called off due to rain.South Australia won the toss and Daniel Harris faced the first six deliveries before the first lot of wet weather arrived and sent the players off until after tea. On the resumption Smith edged Michael Hogan behind from the first ball back, but there were only 3.1 overs allowed before the rain returned.

Blackwell's hundred drives NSW to 395

New South Wales 5 for 395 (Blackwell 157, Poulton 86, Sthalekar 75) beat Tasmania 160 (Burns 51, Perry 4-10) by 235 runs
Scorecard
Alex Blackwell posted the second-highest score in WNCL history to push the New South Wales Breakers to a record-breaking 5 for 395 in the 235-run victory over Tasmania. The total comfortably beat the previous best of 3 for 309, which was set by ACT against South Australia last year, and the victory was sealed when Tasmania fell for 160.Blackwell, the captain, raced to 157 off 111 balls, with 17 fours and a six, while Leah Poulton (86) and Lisa Sthalekar (75) also joined the fun. “I was quite determined once I got to 100 to see if I could push myself to 150,” Blackwell said. “I’ve never done that before. I didn’t have any records in mind but as a personal milestone I just wanted to make sure I kicked on.”She said as the game wore on the team was aiming for 400. “All the way through our innings we had our goals,” she said, “and in the end we fell just short of that.”Tasmania lasted until the 37th over, with Erin Burns top scoring with 51. Ellyse Perry did the damage with the ball by taking 4 for 10 from 7.4 overs.

Umpires thought Amir no-ball was tactical

The umpires Tony Hill and Billy Bowden suspected one of Mohammad Amir’s colossal no-balls in the Lord’s Test was deliberate, but only as a means to intimidate the batsman Jonathan Trott. The major overstep from the third ball of the 19th over was a central part of the spot-fixing allegations against Amir first published in the .It was a short delivery that troubled Trott, who was on 21 at the time and went on to finish with 184. Hill said he and his fellow New Zealander Bowden had no inkling about any possible spot-fixing, but the extent of the no-ball raised questions in their minds about whether it was intentional.”We never suspected a thing,” Hill told the . “There had been the big overstep in particular and in our minds that was more a deliberate overstep to have a go at Trott, who had been batting so well.”Billy and I chatted about that and thought it seemed deliberate, especially as it was dropped in short. But it all seemed to be one of those things that fast bowlers have been known to do to get an advantage.”Hill was the man who called another no-ball from Mohammad Asif, which was also mentioned in the original allegations. He said the Asif delivery was much less of a concern as he stepped over by only a narrow margin.”The one at my end from Asif was not a helluva lot over,” Hill said. “He is generally pretty accurate [with his front foot]. It is the Glenn McGrath type thing where the foot comes down always in the same spot. When it alters slightly you think it is unusual but like McGrath, or anyone when they try harder, can occasionally go over.”Hill said he and Bowden were kept up to date on the allegations after the third day’s play and it turned into a later night than usual for the officials. He described as “eerie” the feeling out in the middle on the morning of the fourth day, as England wrapped up the match quickly.”It was very quiet out there,” he said. “Both teams were very quiet. You always expected something to be said out there but it wasn’t. They just got on with playing the game.”From our point of view it was a matter of trying to concentrate like hell so we weren’t caught up in the moment. I was expecting a few verbals, but thankfully both sides concentrated on the cricket side of things. It was almost quiet.”

Yorkshire keep title race alive with five-wicket win

ScorecardJonathan Bairstow cracked an aggressive, unbeaten 63, hitting the winning runs as Yorkshire got home by five wickets•Getty Images

Yorkshire put themselves right back into the race for the County Championship title with a deserved five-wicket victory over leaders Nottinghamshire. After bowling the hosts out for 413 in their second innings, with Ajmal Shahzad picking up four wickets to take his match haul to eight for 121, Yorkshire raced to their victory target of 209 inside 43 overs thanks to a sparkling unbeaten 63 from Jonathan Bairstow.There was a brief scare when they lost their top four in the space of six overs, but Bairstow put on 97 in 15 overs for the fifth wicket with Gerard Brophy (41), before taking a single to square leg to complete the win. The victory meant Yorkshire climbed to within seven points of Notts going into the final round of matches.Notts began the day 152 ahead on 357 for 6, realistically needing another 100 runs to stand a chance of an unlikely win after being bowled out for just 59 in their first innings. Nightwatchman Darren Pattinson advanced the score to 373 before misjudging the line of a delivery from Steven Patterson to be plumb lbw shouldering arms for 27, and Notts then saw the last three wickets fall in 12 balls.Steven Mullaney was bowled by Patterson with one that kept low, skipper Chris Read castled for 47 by an offcutter from Shahzad and last man Luke Fletcher deceived by a slower ball from the England seamer to also be bowled. Notts desperately needed early wickets to put any pressure on the visitors but instead openers Adam Lyth and Jacques Rudolph put on 65 in the 12 overs before lunch to deflate the hopes of the home fans.Pattinson briefly provided some inspiration either side of a half-hour rain break, Rudolph edging to gully and Anthony McGrath gloving a vicious throat ball to Read behind the stumps. The Australian quick then had Lyth caught at first slip for three wickets in three consecutive overs and when Andre Adams bowled Andrew Gale through the gate, Notts again had a sniff.But Bairstow and Brophy took advantage of the attacking field to charge towards the finish, Brophy falling with 17 needed to an edge to slip off Adams, before Bairstow finished things off in the company of Adil Rashid. Notts now travel to Old Trafford knowing a 22-point victory will guarantee them the title, having gained more wins over the season than either of their rivals, while Yorkshire must take maximum points from their home tie with Kent and rely on both Notts and Somerset dropping points.

Youngsters script Essex comeback

ScorecardMichael Comber and Adam Wheater, both aged 20, were the Essex heroes as thehome side beat Northamptonshire by five wickets in their Clydesdale Bank 40clash at Southend.They came together with Essex struggling on 100 for 5 in the 22nd over inreply to a total of 215 for 6. But both displayed a cool head on young shoulders to see their side home with nine balls to spare.Comber, making his debut in the competition, made 52 while Wheater finished on55. Both completed their half-centuries from 47 balls, Comber reaching his with anon-driven six against paceman David Willey. He also dealt out similar punishment to off-spinner James Middlebrook and also struck two fours.Wheater’s innings included five fours as he and Comber excelled in theirrunning between the wickets. Their performance came after Essex had got off to a terrible start, losing Mark Pettini and Grant Flower without a run on the board. Lee Daggett was the man who plunged them into early trouble, having Pettini caught behind with his second ball and trapping Flower lbw with his next delivery.Ravi Bopara and Matt Walker repaired the damage with a partnership of 87 thatwas broken when Middlebrook, playing against his former county, accepted asimple return catch. Walker made 39 before Bopara and James Foster were both dismissed immediately after the total passed 100.Bopara fell lbw to Middlebrook for 42, having hit the previous ball for six,while Foster became a victim of spinner Tom Brett. But their removal from the scene only paved the way for Comber and Wheater to come together and steal the glory.Earlier, Northants made steady but unspectacular progress. Opener Mal Loyeneeded 77 balls to make 55 before he was dismissed by Bopara. The main impetus was provided by Stephen Peters, another former Essex player, and David Sales.Sales made 36 from 34 deliveries before he was superbly caught low down at deepsquare leg by Flower, while Peters was within four of his half-century when hewas caught at deep long off by Bryce McGain. His 53-ball effort contained justthree boundaries. During it Peters was hit on the arm and was unable to take any further part inthe match as he handed over the captaincy to Sales.

MCC calls for immediate day/night Tests

The MCC World Cricket Committee fears for the future of Test cricket unless action is taken quickly to promote the traditional format and has called for the immediate introduction of day/night matches to boost the game in countries where attendances are low.The committee, which concluded a two-day meeting at Lord’s on Friday and consists of a host of former players, reiterated its call for a Test Championship to bring context to the five-day game, but believes recent testing with pink balls means that floodlit Tests can start as soon as possible.”We should not delay in presenting day-night Test cricket as an option for those Test-playing countries that are struggling to attract an audience,” John Stephenson, the MCC assistant secretary, said. “We say this form of the game is viable now. We proved it in Abu Dhabi with the four-day game under lights.”It was the perfect experiment, and demonstrated this game should go ahead now. We don’t need another 18 months of research. The world of cricket is ready. It should not wait; the time is now.”The former Australian captain, Steve Waugh, was one of the committee members advocating the pink-ball revolution. “I think it would be great,” he said. “There’s always resistance to change because it takes people out of their comfort zone, but I think back to World Series Cricket back when I was a kid. It ignited the spark among the spectators, and as players it’s exciting. Like Twenty20 cricket, it would be something new and challenging, and as a player I’d really embrace that.”A day-night Test would be a chance to be part of history, by taking the game in a different direction, and Test cricket needs a few little changes to get people back on board and watching it. There are always going to be negative people and you tend to hear them more, but you’ve just got to get on with the game. It’s a cricket ball but it’s a different colours. Try it out and see what happens.”ICC have taken a more cautious view of the potential for day/night Tests and want more research undertaken before they are introduced, while not all the feedback coming out of Abu Dhabi from players was positive. However, in May, David Morgan, who finished his term as ICC President yesterday, hinted that the change could soon happen.”I talked to administrators in Australia whom I expected to be so conservative as to be against day-night Test cricket but they are very much for it,” he said. “I believe it won’t be too long before we see day-night Test cricket in Australia or India.”The world cricket committee also said that it was vital that Test match pitches offered a fair balance between bat and ball to maintain interest levels. They cited the surfaces in Bangladesh as a poor example for the game, while recently in St Kitts West Indies and South Africa played a Test that was an inevitable draw from very early.”MCC’s research from India, New Zealand and South Africa, published in November 2009, showed that the cricketing public in these countries wanted to watch day/night Test cricket and were strongly in favour of a World Test Championship,” an MCC statement said. “Fairer pitches, such as the ones England recently encountered in South Africa – which offered bounce and some assistance to the bowlers – rather than in Bangladesh – which were low, slow and batsmen-friendly – would also help to improve the game as a spectacle.”The committee, which also published research which showed only 11% of cricket watched in India was Test matches compared to 33% six years ago, added that it understood that the commercial demands of the game meant that Twenty20 was a crucial format for the financial health of the sport. But it believes that Test cricket should be made more attractive with greater rewards on offer to ward off the threat of players becoming Twenty20 freelancers.”With T20 riches on offer, the committee feel that national governing bodies should do all that they can to retain their best talent and ensure Test cricket is a financially rewarding career. There are freelance cricketers who see a profitable career in playing shorter forms of the game only; the committee wants to guard against an increase in their number.”The committee understands that market forces will always dictate what type of cricket spectators want to watch and that you cannot force people to watch Test match cricket. At the moment, however, cricket authorities around the world need to make a more concerted effort to attract audiences to Test cricket: a World Test Championship, played by well-rewarded cricketers – on fair pitches – at a time of the day to suit the paying public, would provide the Test game with the boost it requires.””It’s important that senior players pass on to the junior players just how important it is to play Test cricket,” said Waugh. “We’ve seen what’s happened in West Indies cricket, with Chris Gayle stating he prefers Twenty20 cricket. That’s had an impact on his side. The senior players have to pass it on, because as soon as you lose it from one generation to the next, then there’s going to be trouble.”The cricket committee meeting also received a presentation from Andy Flower, the England coach, on the current situation in Zimbabwe and the MCC will be sending a fact-finding trip to the country to assess the feasibility of a club tour in 2011.

'I played my percentages and took it on' – Morgan

After the innings of his life to date, Eoin Morgan faced the press with the same thousand-yard stare and monotone voice that Bob Willis produced at Headingley after his own demolition of the Aussies back in 1981. It was hardly surprising, to be fair. After gracing the Rose Bowl with a performance of Technicolor rarely witnessed in England’s one-day history, he wasn’t interested in furnishing his effort with any more superlatives than he’d already produced.”I’m just doing what I practise really,” he deadpanned. “It was a belting wicket. I played my percentages and took it on. It’s tough playing against Australia, especially with the attack they have. They’ve got some good bowlers, so it was nice. I’ve got no trick shots on the snooker table. And I’m rubbish at golf.” At 10.30pm after a sapping evening’s work, that was pretty much that.Morgan will know, however, that in a year that culminates in both an Ashes and a World Cup campaign, that was quite some manifesto to slap on the table. When he last took part in a home one-day series, in the autumnal mists last September, he was a rookie finding his feet against a vengeful Aussie outfit, who were on their way to a 6-1 thumping.Now, nine months down the line, he’s cemented a role as England’s finest finisher for a generation, having played an integral role in a one-day series win in South Africa, and a maiden ICC global triumph in the Caribbean. And, as a packed and jubilant Rose Bowl crowd rose to acclaim his first hundred on home soil, it really was a case of seeing is believing for the English cricket’s fanbase.”The great thing about Morgy is he is a finisher, but he does it in an aggressive manner as well, and that puts opposition captains under pressure,” said Andrew Strauss. “He’s doing it consistently as well, and it was an outstanding innings today – one of the very best I’ve seen in an England shirt.”Coming from a man who’s seen Kevin Pietersen in full flow on numerous occasions in the past five years, that was quite some statement, but Strauss was loathe to suggest that a new sheriff had ridden into KP’s town. “I don’t think we need to compare the two,” he said. “It’s not like a ‘wow!’ competition. He plays some outrageous shots but the great thing is he can score around the wicket against all sorts of bowling, so as an opposition captain, you scratch your head and think how can we tie him down. It’s proving difficult at the moment.”Morgan’s intervention was audacious and emphatic. At the nadir of England’s innings, they had slumped to 97 for 4 after 20 overs, a scenario almost identical to Australia’s early wobble at 98 for 4 after 21.2. But, on his watch, England somehow rushed to victory with an impertinent four overs to spare. The actual margin of victory – four wickets – was more realistic as to the tussle that had taken place. But Morgan’s magic ensured the final stages were a rout.”I thought tonight was a pretty even contest, for the majority of the game it was right in the balance,” said Ricky Ponting. “It was a decent game of cricket and we’ve got some work to do to make sure we are a bit better prepared next game. We were a long way below our best tonight and we still remained pretty competitive. If there are any positives for us at all, that’s probably it out of the game.”Inevitably, Ponting played down any suggestion that England have raised their one-day game to levels never before seen in his career – (“Maybe they are getting a few more results now, but that doesn’t necessarily mean there’s been a change in attitude …”), while Strauss maintained the admirable calm that has been England’s stock reaction to their recent efforts by pointing out that this was just one match out of five. But in the same week that Sachin Tendulkar suggested that Australia are as vulnerable as they’ve been for 20 years, the collective confidence of England’s cricket was almost as striking as Morgan’s individual effort.”It’s the first game, but we’ve done a lot of things right,” said Strauss. “The bowlers did a good job to restrict Australia to 267 and at the halfway mark I think we felt we were in front. But Australia being Australia they’ll come back at us hard in the next game, so let’s not pat ourselves on the back too much in this game. Ultimately it’s a very satisfying victory.”The more Morgan’s game develops, the more the comparisons with a certain MG Bevan will start to flood in, and Strauss didn’t pretend he hadn’t noticed the similarities between two left-handed icemen with an uncanny knack for producing a crucial boundary in some undefendable corner of the field.”We’ve been looking for a Michael Bevan-type character for quite a long time, and Morgs has shown a few times in both 50-over and 20-over cricket that he can play in a similar fashion, and perhaps a bit more aggressively than Bevan. We can’t rely on one person, we need to get contributions from 1 to 9 in the batting order, which is why it was good that Luke Wright came in and did a good job at No. 6 and Tim Bresnan at No. 7.”But ultimately, the first ODI was all about one man, and Ponting is already plotting to stop him. “He did everything right tonight, there’s no doubt about that. He didn’t offer us a chance, did he? He hit the ball very, very well.”The difference in those situations is how much pressure you can build up and how much you can put on them to hit a boundary. We didn’t do that tonight. He got his boundaries too easily, which allowed them to stay in front in the game. We have to make it harder for good players like him to find the boundary in those middle overs.”Against the slower guys he is unorthodox. You saw that tonight when [Nathan] Hauritz first came on. The way he reverse-sweeps makes it difficult to set fields for. But the way our quicks and our medium-pacers bowled to him tonight, we just gave him too many easy boundary options. There’s not too many guys in international cricket if you bowl them a half-volley they won’t put it away.”He hit a lot of cover-drives for four. We have to address that, and address it pretty quickly for the next game.”

Tasmania sign Mark Cosgrove

Mark Cosgrove has been thrown a lifeline having signed with Tasmania in the final round of contract negotiations after being sacked by South Australia. Cosgrove, who played one-day international cricket for Australia four years ago, was a surprise axing from the Redbacks’ list for next season and was snapped up by a Tasmania side chasing top-order batting talent.At 25, Cosgrove has plenty of cricket ahead of him, but his weight has been an ongoing issue and contributed to him playing less games than he could have for South Australia. Last summer, he was second on the state’s list of Sheffield Shield averages with 511 runs at 42.58, but he was told there was not a spot for him next season.Cosgrove, who is currently playing with Glamorgan, will add experience to a Tasmania batting line-up that has lost Daniel Marsh to retirement. The Tigers have finalised their squad for 2010-11 and there was no place for Michael Dighton, John Rogers or Wade Irvine, all of whom were delisted from last season’s group.However, they have left the door open for Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, their overseas signing for the Big Bash last summer, to expand his role to the other formats next season. Rana will join the Tigers again for the Twenty20 tournament and, if available, the state will consider him for the four-day and 50-over competitions.The only other addition from the initial squad that was named last week was the former ACT batsman Ashton May, who has been given a rookie deal. Tasmania are keen for more improvement from their developing squad after last summer finishing second-last in the Sheffield Shield but winning the FR Cup.Tasmania squad George Bailey, Travis Birt, Luke Butterworth, Steven Cazzulino, Mark Cosgrove, Ed Cowan, Gerard Denton, Xavier Doherty, Alex Doolan, Brendan Drew, James Faulkner, Brett Geeves, Adam Griffith, Ben Hilfenhaus (Cricket Australia contract), Jason Krejza, Rhett Lockyear, Tim Macdonald, Adam Maher, Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, Tim Paine (CA), Ricky Ponting (CA), Jon Wells.Rookies Matthew Day, Brady Jones, Hamish Kingston, Ashton May, Jeremy Smith, Tom Triffitt.

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