MacGill to miss one-dayer with nose injury

New South Wales will be without Stuart MacGill for Wednesday’s one-day match © Getty Images

Stuart MacGill’s interrupted start to the season has continued after he injured his nose in a fielding accident while training on Saturday. The mishap forced him out of New South Wales’ Ford Ranger Cup match against Tasmania on Sunday and will also keep him from playing the FR Cup game against Western Australia at the SCG on Wednesday.MacGill has had a less-than-ideal three months after hurting his knee in Australia’s boot camp in the Queensland bush in August and incurring a two-week ban for a verbal stoush in a Sydney club game in October. The New South Wales selectors will wait for a report on his injury before deciding if he will play in the Pura Cup clash with the Warriors starting on Friday.Nathan Hauritz, who replaced MacGill in Sunday’s game and took 3 for 25, will again be the front-line spinner for the one-day match. The selectors have named a 13-man squad including Michael Clarke. However, if Clarke is required by the Australia team ahead of the first Ashes Test starting on Thursday, the 13th man Ed Cowan could replace him in the New South Wales team.New South Wales squad Phil Jaques, Simon Katich (capt), Michael Clarke, Dominic Thornely, Ed Cowan, Aaron O’Brien, Brad Haddin (wk), Daniel Christian, Moises Henriques, Aaron Bird, Nathan Hauritz, Nathan Bracken, Doug Bollinger.

Reardon replaces injured Simpson

Nathan Reardon, the 20-year-old allrounder, has been catapulted into Queensland’s ING Cup season opener against New South Wales on Friday following an injury to Chris Simpson. Simpson was named in both the one-day and four-day squads yesterday, but was ruled out this morning with a side strain that prevented him from batting at the weekend.”We were confident that Chris was going to be right but following discussions with the medical staff it was felt it would be an unnecessary risk this early in the season,” Ray Phillips, the chairman of selectors, said. Reardon, a rookie-contracted player, is expected to make his debut as the side’s super sub as the competition adopts the ICC’s one-day rules for the first time.A left-handed batsman and right-arm medium-pace bowler, Reardon has enjoyed a successful off-season that has included impressive performances on tour for the Commonwealth Bank Centre of Excellence in India and Sri Lanka.Queensland ING Cup squad
1 Jimmy Maher (capt), 2 James Hopes, 3 Andrew Symonds, 4 Clinton Perren, 5 Brendan Nash, 6 Chris Simpson, 7 Chris Hartley (wk), 8 Andy Bichel, 9 Nathan Hauritz, 10 Mitchell Johnson, 11 Michael Kasprowicz, 12 Nathan Reardon.New South Wales
1 Phil Jaques, 2 Matthew Phelps, 3 Dominic Thornely, 4 Corey Richards, 5 Ed Cowan, 6 James Packman, 7 Brad Haddin (capt, wk), 8 Aaron O’Brien, 9 Matthew Nicholson, 10 Nathan Bracken, 11 Doug Bollinger, 12 Stuart Clark.

Sri Lanka declaration sets up thrilling finish


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Boeta Dippenaar survives a loud appeal towards the close of play© AFP

South Africa’s bowlers led the fightback, and Marvan Atapattu’s declaration towards the end of the day – setting a tricky target of 325 – left the first Test at Galle intriguingly poised. After wrapping up the South African tail early in the day, Sanath Jayasuriya, with 74, led the charge towards a massive lead. But the bowlers never let the Sri Lankan batsmen cut loose as wickets fell steadily throughout the afternoon, thereby delaying the declaration.Realistically, South Africa can only hope for a draw. The pitch, which has grown increasingly variable in bounce, was offering vicious turn towards the end. While not yet the minefield that had been predicted, survival itself will be hard, let alone run scoring. But South Africa, who will take heart from England’s great escape last year when they finished on 210 for 9 after digging in for 108 overs, have improved their chances of scraping home with a plucky effort over the four days.But thus far they have been outgunned by a vibrant Sri Lanka team and it was Jayasuriya that led the batting charge today, adding 62 runs with Atapattu (25) before a grubber from Lance Klusener cannoned into Atapattu’s shins. Kumar Sangakkara was in fine form, cutting and driving Nicky Boje for two boundaries, but, much to his disgust, was then caught at long-off after a horrible miscue. Mahela Jayawardene, the first-innings double centurion, will also want to quickly forget his inside-out lofted drive that fell into the safe hands of Jacques Rudolph at long-off (103 for 3).Sri Lanka reached the tea interval at 112 for 3. Afterwards they tried to accelerate but the departure of Jayasuriya, who looked destined for a 13th Test hundred, was a major blow. Jayasuriya had not been at his electric best, working hard for his runs and hitting just six fours, but some late afternoon fireworks would have allowed an earlier declaration. Instead, though, he nicked an innocuous offcutter from Shaun Pollock, who was bowling from a short run, as he tried to dab down to third man (140 for 4).The breakthrough prompted a small flurry of wickets as, next over, Pollock pinned Tillakaratne Dilshan leg-before with a late inswinger. Thilan Samaraweera was defeated by another low-bouncing skidder from Klusener, another sign that the pitch was starting to deteriorate faster, and Romesh Kaluwitharana was beaten by some extra turn from Boje and caught at slip. Upul Chandana chipped in with a brisk 29 from 40 balls before the declaration finally came. Boje finished with a rich haul of 5 for 88.South Africa’s openers, Graeme Smith – now restored to full health – and Boeta Dippenaar safely negotiated the three overs before close. There was one massive, but speculative, appeal for a bat-pad off Dippenaar in the final over but no other great alarms. But that delivery, which exploded back from way outside off, will leave a seed of doubt in the South Africa dressing room as they prepare for a crucial final day.At the start of the day, the first-over fall of Boje broke the back of South Africa’s first-innings resistance, as Sri Lanka bowled them out for 376 to clinch a valuable 110-run lead, and allowing them to take back full control. South Africa added just 29 runs in an hour, but Rudolph at least managed to scramble the 15 he needed to complete a richly-deserved fourth Test century, an epic marathon of patient defiance that lasted nearly seven hours and spanned 297 balls.

Jacques Rudolph – a picture of concentration as he spent 297 balls for his 102© AFP

Sri Lanka needed only four balls to break through as Boje, who failed to add to his overnight 31, glanced a leg-side catch to Kaluwitharana, who swept up the ball with a neat one-handed pouch (348 for 8).Having broken the eighth-wicket stand, which had yielded 53 runs, Muttiah Muralitharan was pushed into action to mop up the tail. Makhaya Ntini, swinging wildly, slogged a brace of boundaries, but eventually skied a catch to Chandana at deep midwicket to leave Rudolph on 91 not out as Nantie Hayward, the last man, strode to the crease.Rudolph held his nerve, farming the bowling and creeping closer with singles at the end of overs. He could have been caught behind on 96, when a thick edge evaded Kaluwitharana’s bright yellow gloves, before squeezing a couple of runs off an inside edge to reach surely the most hard-working hundred of his career.But Muralitharan, who yesterday moved ahead of Shane Warne when he took wicket No. 528, wrapped up the innings to finish with 4 for 130 from 46.4 overs. Clearly, without the doosra, wicket-taking will be tougher in the coming weeks. But come the final day, when South Africa try and battle on a dusty pitch, he will remain Sri Lanka’s lynchpin.

SPCL1 Week11 – Pegler conceded hopes not over

Calmore Sports captain Tom Pegler refuses to believe that all is lost in the Totton club’s bid for ECB Southern Electric Premier League survival, even after a crushing 138-run defeat against the Hampshire Academy at the Rose Bowl."We are only 19 points behind Liphook & Ripsley and if we can beat them in the last `time’ game on August 2, there’s no reason why we can’t stay up," he said defiantly.But Pegler acknowledges that , if Calmore are to avoid the drop, they will have to start producing some much improved batting displays.Having chased 239-8 in the heat, Calmore were bowled out for 101 on a Nursery ground surface that will have few equals this season."Our batting against the Academy wasn’t good," conceded Pegler, whose Calmore team has gleaned only 15 batting bonus points in ten matches, nine of which have ended in defeat.Calmore’s only win this season came against the Young Hawks, but there was little likelihood of a repeat of that seven-wicket early May victory.The Academy simply batted Calmore out of the game, declared in just under 60 overs and gave themselves ample time in which to bowl the basement boys out.Charlie Freeston struck an early blow by rearranging Jimmy Adams’s stumps, but the Academy youngsters gradually began to dominate.Alex Richardson, the King Edward VI youngster, played some nice shots before playing all around a delivery from left-arm spinner Mark Boston.But it was the pre-lunch third-wicket stand between Chris Benham (82) and Kevin Latouf (54) which set the Academy up for a match-winning score.Benham, surviving a confident appeal at 33, went on to hit 14 fours in a fine 82, while Layoff (54), one of eight teenager Hawks, celebrated his maiden Premier half-century.From 145-3 at lunch, the county pushed on to 239-8 declared – Boston wheeling away and finished with 5-88 off 23 overs : his longest spell in five years !Directly Martin Bushel misspelled a short ball from Matt Metcalfe into square-leg’s waiting hands, the game was up for Calmore, who might have a quiet word or two with the Berkshire youngster about the petulant behaviour which immediately followed.As skipper Ian Hilsum attacked, Gary Stinson (20) and Stuart Bailey (20) picked gaps in the field.But the pair both fell to James Manning (2-17) before the Calmore innings went into free fall from 57-2 to 86-9 and an eventual 101 all out.Hilsum (4-13), whose leg spin action has been tampered with by far too many coaches in recent seasons, cashed in as Calmore slipped to 101 all out in 32.1 overs.

Waugh misses final hitout but Lee back

Australian captain Steve Waugh will miss his last chance for an interstate match before the first cricket Test against New Zealand but paceman Brett Lee is back.Lee was named today to return from a side strain injury for New South Wales in its Pura Cup match against South Australia starting at the SCG on Friday.Waugh was not considered on advice of Australian team physiotherapist Errol Alcott as he continues his recovery from a bout of deep vein thrombosis (DVT).Waugh has been back in training for two weeks since returning from the Ashes tour with a calf muscle injury and the DVT.But unless his plays for his Sydney club Bankstown next weekend, as seems unlikely, the 36-year-old will go into the first Test at the Gabba from November 8 without a hit out since his Ashes fifth Test heroics in August.Lee took 3-49 from eight overs for his club Mosman yesterday to demonstrate that he had fully recovered from the side strain suffered in the fifth Test at The Oval.Also recalled for NSW was fellow Ashes tourist and paceman Nathan Bracken, who injured his left bowling shoulder on the tour.The players to make way for Lee and Bracken were Don Nash and Anthony Clark.NSW team: Michael Slater, Greg Mail, Michael Bevan, Mark Waugh, Shane Lee (capt), Mark Higgs, Brad Haddin, Brett Lee, Nathan Bracken, Stuart MacGill,Glenn McGrath, Stuart Clark (12th man TBA).

Vibrant England show nerve in five-run win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:31

England’s excellent summer continues

In years to come, people will look at the scorecard of this match and presume that Ben Stokes – with modest bowling figures and a peripheral figure with the bat – played nothing more than a supporting role in this game.But Stokes, with an outstanding catch and a nerveless final over, played a key part in an England victory that continues a remarkable summer that promised little more than pain and has delivered more promise and encouragement than even the most optimistic supporters could have anticipated.After a grim 2014 when they lost nine of their 12 T20Is, including a wretched World T20 campaign, new-look England have now won three in a row and have defeated the No. 2 ranked side. Their limited-overs resurgence, a development that looked most unlikely when they were knocked out of the World Cup at the first hurdle only a few months ago, continues.More importantly, with players such as Stokes involved, they appear to be developing into a team that relishes pressure moments. While some previous England sides have appeared to wilt in the spotlight, here they held their nerve under pressure to secure a five-run victory.With seven overs to go, it appeared Australia were cruising. Glenn Maxwell and Steven Smith, with his maiden T20I half-century, had added 112 for the third-wicket and the previous four overs had cost 13, 10, 14 and 14 respectively.But then Maxwell attempted to pull Moeen Ali’s first ball, little more than a dragged-down long-hop really, for six over mid-wicket only to see Stokes, dashing round from long-on, leap to his right and cling on to an outstanding catch.It was the moment that changed the game. Reece Topley, impressively calm for a 21-year-old on international debut, bowled Mitchell Marsh with a nicely disguised slower-ball delivered out of the back of the hand before Smith miss-hit to mid-on. Nerves spread through the Australian line-up and with Stokes delivering a fine final over – Australia could manage just six of the 12 runs they required for victory from it – they lost five wickets for 16 runs in the final 14 balls of the innings.Stokes is not the only one in this new-look England side that seems to relish the big occasion. His captain, Eoin Morgan, has struggled so badly in county cricket that it was decided to rest him for a month prior to this matchBut here, coming to the wicket with his side struggling to make progress against Australia’s impressive pace attack, he looked a high-class T20 player in thrashing 74 from just 39 balls. It was an innings that largely vindicated his decision to rest.”I’ve been practising for the last 10 days and it’s been really good,” he said. “I feel fresh mentally and physically.”I’ve never asked for a break before. It had been 11-months without one and, if I’d known I’d be so busy in October, I’d have asked for one before. It’s worked out well.”With Moeen, who made a career-best T20I score of 72 not out and was given his first international Man of the Match award, Morgan added 135 in 12.2 overs for the third-wicket – England’s fourth highest T20I partnership – to help them recover from a lacklustre start that yielded only 27 runs and two wickets from the Powerplay.At that stage, the Australian attack looked daunting. Pat Cummins, generating fierce speed (he averaged 91 mph), beat Alex Hales for pace with a full toss and then had Jason Roy taken at mid-off as he tried to hit over the top.But life became easier once the support bowlers were introduced into the attack immediately after the Powerplay. Moeen, unhurried and elegant, drove Marsh’s first delivery over extra cover for four and then took 13 off Marcus Stoinis first over in international cricket.Stoinis’ was a somewhat puzzling selection. Having only played nine T20 games in his entire career – he was injured for the last Big Bash season – and delivered just five overs, his attempt to bounce Moeen was greeted by a pulled six, while the next delivery was dragged over mid-wicket for four more. He was withdrawn from the attack after the over and not seen again.Morgan, while less elegant than Moeen, was every bit as effective. Skipping down the wicket to Shane Watson, he clubbed one six – with both feet off the ground – over the bowler’s head for six, before taking three sixes of the bowler in his next over: anything on a good length hit over the top; anything short clubbed over mid-wicket. With Moeen taking a liking to the sedate legspin of Cameron Boyce, who is not part of the one-day squad, the pair added 41 in two overs at one stage.By the time Cummins was reintroduced into the attack, Morgan was in full flow. A slower ball full toss was carved for one six before the next delivery, a short ball, was pulled for six more.While the impressive Nathan Coulter-Nile ended Morgan’s fun, Jos Buttler contributed 11 from four balls and, while England could managed only one more boundary from the final 16 balls of their innings, the target they set – 183 to win – had only been achieved once by Australia (against Pakistan in the memorable World T20 semi-final in 2010) in their T20I history.Still, Morgan admitted he was “disappointed we didn’t get 200” and “disappointed we didn’t finish better.”Australia lost both openers early. David Warner was caught at third-man off the leading edge, again attempting to punch a short ball into the leg side, before Watson, to the obvious amusement of the England team, was bowled after the ball trickled back on to his stumps from a defensive shot and he missed his attempt to kick it away: an ironic end given how many times he has been dismissed due to his feetHowever, Smith, batting in the top three for the first time in T20Is, looked imperious on a surface offering the bowlers little lateral movement and Maxwell demonstrated a maturity to complement his talent with a well-paced 44.It was hard to believe that Smith’s average in his previous 21 T20Is was just 14 as he drove Steven Finn for one glorious six and then swung him for another vast one into the pavilion.Stokes’ catch ended the partnership, though, and with Smith lacking support and England proving the calmer side, Australia’s chase fell away.”Moeen and Morgan got it over the fence quite a bit which is what you need,” Smith said. “And our bowlers didn’t execute as well as they would have liked. England have played some very good ODI cricket of late.”Stoinis will be better for the run – everyone is nervous in their first game – and Boyce bowled well in Dubai, where the conditions will be similar to the World T20 in India. It was quite hard going for him, but he will learn and continue to get better.”

Bracewell to lead New Zealand in ODIs against India, Santner to return for T20Is

Left-arm fingerspinner Jayden Lennox has earned a maiden call-up to New Zealand’s white-ball squads for the India tour next month. He features in the ODI squad alongside uncapped bowling-allrounder Kristian Clarke, legspinning-allrounder Adithya Ashok, seam-bowling allrounder Josh Clarkson and fast bowler Michael Rae, who made his Test debut earlier this month against West Indies.Michael Bracewell will captain the 15-member ODI squad in the absence of Mitchell Santner, whose groin injury is being managed. Santner will return to lead the T20I squad, which features big-hitting batters Bevon Jacobs and Tim Robinson as well as Mark Chapman and Matt Henry, both of whom are returning from ankle and calf injuries respectively. Henry will miss the ODIs to continue his rehabilitation from a calf tear in a bid to return for the T20Is and the subsequent men’s T20 World Cup.Kane Williamson was unavailable for the ODIs because of his commitments in the SA20, where he will play for Durban’s Supergiants.Related

  • Allen to miss start of India T20I series

  • Gill left out of India's T20 World Cup squad

Clarke was called up to the ODI squad during the home series against England and then to the Test squad against West Indies but did not make his debut. Nathan Smith, William O’Rourke and Blair Tickner were not considered because of their side, back and shoulder injuries respectively, while Tom Latham will skip the ODIs for the birth of his third child. Fast bowler Kyle Jamieson and Zak Foulkes are part of both the white-ball squads while Rachin Ravindra and quick Jacob Duffy have been rested from the ODIs following a busy home summer.”Jayden has been an identified player of interest for some time and has some good New Zealand “A” experience under his belt,” New Zealand head coach Rob Walter said of Lennox, who has picked up eight wickets in five Ford Trophy outings for Central Districts this season. “He’s consistently been one of the top performers in white-ball cricket domestically for a number of seasons.”Playing in the sub-continent is obviously very different to what we’re used to in New Zealand, so any opportunity we can get to expose our guys to those conditions can only be a good thing, especially prior to a T20 World Cup in the subcontinent.”Mitchell Hay and Devon Conway will keep wicket for the ODIs and T20Is, respectively. Lockie Ferguson (ILT20), Adam Milne (SA20), Finn Allen and Tim Seifert (both BBL) are slated to join the T20I squad at the back end of the series with an eye on the T20 World Cup.The tour starts with the ODIs from January 11 in Vadodara before the five-match T20I series begins on January 21 in Nagpur.

New Zealand ODI squad vs India

Michael Bracewell (capt), Adithya Ashok, Kristian Clarke, Josh Clarkson, Devon Conway, Zak Foulkes, Mitch Hay (wk), Kule Jamieson, Nick Kelly, Jayden Lennox, Daryl Mitchell, Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips, Michael Rae, Will Young

New Zealand T20I squad vs India

Mitchell Santner (capt), Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Devon Conway (wk), Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes, Matt Henry, Kyle Jamieson, Bevon Jacobs, Daryl Mitchell, James Neesham, Glenn Phillips, Rachin Ravindra, Tim Robinson, Ish Sodhi

'Our preparation was excellent' – Ponting

‘I’m not sure if we outsmarted India but we certainly outperformed them’ – Ponting © AFP

Ricky Ponting thought he had India under pressure from the very first ball and Mahendra Singh Dhoni conceded that India were “never really in the game,” as the two rival captains addressed contrasting press conferences soon after Australia took an unassailable 3-1 lead in this seven-match series. While Ponting was detailed and articulate in his responses, Dhoni understandably had less to say, and though he was jovial and doing his best to keep his humour, clearly did not enjoy the way things had gone.”I’m not sure if we outsmarted India but we certainly outperformed them, especially the way Mitchell [Johnson] and Brett [Lee] bowled with the new ball. We assessed our last performance [in Chandigarh] and even when we lost I didn’t think we did that much wrong,” said Ponting. “We tightened up on a lot of areas that we felt we needed to. I always say that we play better cricket in a tournament or series as the games proceed. We certainly played our best game today. We did everything right with the bowling and fielding and then to chase the target down with only one wicket down on a wicket that was tough to bat on against spin was really good. It’s almost as good as any one-day win we’ve had I think.”When asked what went wrong for India, Dhoni began by popping the question right back at the journalist. “What went wrong? Apart from the toss everything went wrong. We lost early wickets and never came back into the game,” said Dhoni. “Then when we bowled we didn’t get the breakthroughs. Their batsmen were beaten early on but didn’t nick any. We were never really in the game.”The one thing the two captains agreed wholeheartedly on was Sachin Tendulkar’s batting in his 400th ODI. While other batsmen scratched around or perished before they had the chance to do so, Tendulkar was in sublime touch, scoring 47 and looked good for a lot more. “Sachin was the only one who was dominating, apart from the ball that got him,” said Dhoni. “It was like he was batting on one wicket and the rest of us were struggling on some other wicket.” And Ponting did not hold back when talking about Tendulkar’s innings. “Sachin looked very good today. For someone like him he struggled a bit in the last game. Today he drove the ball beautifully,” he said. “Some of the drives off Brett early on were as good as anything you’d see. He was obviously up for it in his 400 th match.”

What went wrong? Apart from the toss everything went wrong Mahendra Singh Dhoni

While Dhoni refused to use being tired – either mentally or physically – as an excuse for the loss, he conceded that the non-stop cricket was making things difficult. “It’s quite tough on the guys. The conditions are difficult, hot and humid here. It’s tough on the players but they don’t really have an option when playing for the country,” he said. “You have to be tough and give your 100%, but when you play four months in a row it does get tough.”Ponting put down his team’s overwhelmingly-strong performance to the kind of preparation that went into this game, beginning with the loss in the last one ain Chandigarh. “You end up assessing things a lot more when you lose. It’s pretty simple when you win. Quite often you end up talking about the same things when you’re winning,” he said. “We had a couple of really good meetings yesterday – first a bowling meeting, then a batting meeting and a team meeting. We spoke of our deficiencies – too many extras, not enough wickets with the new ball, losing wickets at crucial times – we didn’t do any of those things today.”You try and prepare as best as you can for every game. On that wicket I thought I was going to be facing some left-arm spin at some stage so I worked on that in the nets yesterday. Overall our preparation for this game was excellent. We knew it was going to be really hot. We had a light session yesterday and worked on our skills.”Ponting also sought to downplay the issue of on-field chatter that has clouded this series. “I don’t think we were doing the talking at the start of the series. Some of the banter stemmed from our encounter in the Twenty20 game. Some of that spilled over to the early games here,” he said. “The Indians obviously came back feeling very happy about what they achieved at the Twenty20, as they should. There’s been way too much made of this. There hasn’t been any chit-chat since game two and here after game five, we’re still talking about it.”After a performance of this kind, though, there’s really not much need for chatter. The ball, bat and gloves spoke more than enough for the Australians.

India to host West Indies and Sri Lanka

As a part of their World Cup build-up plans, India will host West Indies and Sri Lanka for a series of one-day internationals in January and February. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) announced the itinerary yesterday for a total of eight matches, four each against West Indies and Sri Lanka.India host West Indies in the first leg of the series, with the first ODI on January 21 at Nagpur. The next two games, at Cuttack and Chennai, will be day-night matches. Sri Lanka will play a warm-up game in Mumbai on February 6 before their first game at Pune two days later.West Indies’ will have happy memories of their last bilateral one-day series in India, in 2002-03, when the triumphed in a thrilling seven-match rubber. Sri Lanka, though, will not have too many fond memories of their trip last year when India thumped them 6-1. However, next year’s series promises a fair amount of needle with both teams, who’re slotted in the same World Cup pool, trying to gain the advantage before the big event.West Indies in IndiaJan 21 1st ODI Nagpur
Jan 24 2nd ODI Cuttack (d/n)
Jan 27 3rd ODI Chennai (d/n)
Jan 30 4th ODI Baroda
Sri Lanka in India Feb 6 Warm-up match Mumbai
Feb 8 1st ODI Pune
Feb 11 2nd ODI Rajkot
Feb 14 3rd ODI Goa
Feb 17 4th ODI Vizag

Ross Emerson turns away from cricket

Arjuna Ranatunga argues with Ross Emerson after a no-ball call against Muralitharan© Getty Images

Ross Emerson, whose no-balling of Muttiah Muralitharan at Adelaide in 1999 caused a near melt-down, has turned his back on cricket, blaming the lack of support from the game as the reason for his disenchantment.”Cricket gave me the arse, didn’t they? I didn’t have a future in cricket, so I retired a year after Adelaide,” Emerson said to . “They sacked me from the next two games and then just didn’t reappoint me.” It wasn’t the first time Emerson had called Muralitharan. It had happened earlier, during the infamous tour in 1995-96, when Darrell Hair no-balled him seven times. Ten days after the incident, Emerson called him in a one-dayer. The tour initiated an acrimonious relationship between Muralitharan and Australian crowds, and matters came to a head when Muralitharan reacted to comments ascribed to the Australian Prime Minister.Emerson refused to comment on the new bowling recommendation, and said he enjoyed his new role as the president of Swimming Western Australia. “Swimming has helped fill the void cricket left,” said Emerson. “I love the swimming job and it means I’m present when my daughters are swimming. I’m actually able to be a father again, rather than travelling around.”