Paul Harris added to South African Test squad

Paul Harris could make his debut for his home country if the South Africans opt for a more varied attack © Getty Images

Following the sudden retirement of Nicky Boje, South Africa have included left-arm spinner Paul Harris in their squad for the remaining two Tests against India. He is the only newcomer in the 15-member squad and the second spinner, alongwith Paul Adams.Haroon Lorgat made the announcement in Johannesburg today shortly after South Africa suffered a 123-run defeat in the first Test at the Wanderers. He added that Morne Morkel, the fast bowler who impressed in the tour game against the Indians at Potchefstroom, had been kept on standy as both Dale Steyn and Andrew Hall have fitness concerns.”We did announce the squad for all three Test matches, but Nicky Boje announced his retirement and we were looking for a replacement,” Lorgat told reporters. “We’vedecided on Paul Harris to join the squad. We’ll probably ask Morkel to join the squad in Durban. This time of year, it’s always better to have people with you than allowing them to besomewhere on the beach.”Harris represented English county Warwickshire this year as a “Kolpak” player. Lorgat said he had considered another left-arm spinner, Claude Henderson, who played seven Tests for South Africa. Henderson is currently with English county Leicestershire as their overseas player.”With Paul [Adams] in the squad, and what’s happened with Nicky [Boje], I then went to Claude Henderson, who I thought would be a serious contender,” he added. “But unfortunately, myconversation with Claude indicated that he was not available. So the next best for us was Paul Harris.”Lorgat said the batting order would be discussed ahead of the Durban Test starting December 26, after the top three – Graeme Smith, Herschelle Gibbs and Hashim Amla – failed to get going in both innings at the Wanderers.When asked about Boje’s recent comments slamming the selection policies, Lorgat replied that it was rather unfortunate and his comments on South African spinners were misinterpreted.”It saddens me,” he added. “It’s not in my character to make statements that get people to react in that fashion. I thought I was speaking fact, that we don’t have a spinner who has really changed the course of a Test match for us. I spoke to Nicky for a long time before those remarks were made. But I haven’t been able to talk to him since then.”Squad Graeme Smith (capt), Jacques Kallis, Paul Adams, Hashim Amla, Mark Boucher, AB de Villiers, Herschelle Gibbs, Andrew Hall, Paul Harris, Andre Nel, Makhaya Ntini, Shaun Pollock, Ashwell Prince, Jacques Rudolph, Dale Steyn

Kent left reeling after Prior ton

Scorecard

Mushtaq Ahmed’s two late wickets put Sussex firmly in the driving seat (file photo) © Getty Images
 

Sussex hadn’t quite hit their stride in the early stages of their title defence, but that changed on the second day at Hove as they made full use of the play available on another rain-shortened day to leave Kent reeling on 65 for 6. Matt Prior’s 105, his 16th first-class century, pushed Sussex towards a handy first-innings total before the bowlers set about a Kent batting line-up lacking confidence.Kent’s top order subsided against Nottinghamshire last week, sinking to 13 for 4 in the first innings before eventually edging to 162, and a similar state appeared this time around. Joe Denly, his feet not moving early on, was caught on the crease by Robin Martin-Jenkins. Next ball was virtually the same as Martin van Jaarsveld repeated the first-ball duck he collected against Nottinghamshire.Matthew Walker fell to a stunning catch at gully by Carl Hopkinson when a full-blooded cut shot was plucked, two-handed, to his left leaving Kent on 20 for 3. James Tredwell, opening in place of the ill Robert Key, and Darren Stevens calmed the innings for a time, Stevens showing the range of strokes that has made his average of 32 such a frustration. He had more problems against Mushtaq Ahmed and gifted his wicket in loose fashion with a weak drive to gully off Luke Wright. Hopkinson’s second catch of the innings was much simpler than his first.Neil Dexter was Key’s replacement for this match but didn’t offer much confidence at No. 6 as he laboured for 24 balls. He, too, struggled against Mushtaq and it was little surprise when he was trapped lbw 15 minutes before the close. Mushtaq added Robbie Joseph, the nightwatchman, with another strong appeal even though Joseph was well forward in his defensive shot. The top order could learn from Tredwell’s resilience and there is plenty for him and the host of allrounders to do for Kent to avoid the follow-on let alone compete on first innings.”The success of this team has been built on fighting back from tough situations,” the Sussex coach Mark Robinson said. “I thought we fought hard yesterday, it was a hard-working type of wicket where batsman are never quite settled. Today the bowlers were excellent, Robin has taken on the new ball role like a true professional while Ragheb Aga and Chris Liddle are supporting him well.”Kent’s collapse also adds value to Prior’s innings. When he came in yesterday afternoon the innings was tottering on 103 for 4 but he played a compact and controlled innings, his first century since the unbeaten 126 he made on Test debut against West Indies last May. “It wasn’t a pretty hundred, but a real tough batsman’s innings,” Robinson said. “He battled hard and really deserved it.”Starting the day on 57 he drove and cut strongly as Kent’s bowlers failed to maintain a consistent line and length. Prior has said that he’d consider switching to playing as a specialist batsman if he thought it would be a route back to England for him and the correctness of his strokeplay made a compelling case. However, it’s unlikely Sussex will take the gloves off him – despite having the talented Andy Hodd in the wings – so Prior will have to continue combining both roles for the foreseeable future.Aga, the Kenyan medium-pacer who has played one-day internationals, provided valuable support for Prior in an eighth wicket stand of 76. He was eventually undone by one which climbed a touch outside off stump from Ryan McLaren. Prior then fell pushing at a neat away swinger from Azhar Mahmood, leaving Mushtaq to carry Sussex over the 300-mark.Mushtaq could have been run out three times in his short innings and shared a few words with his former Pakistan team-mate Mahmood in the process. McLaren ended the innings when he bowled Liddle, but 303 represented a decent recovery from Sussex. When the Kent top order was blown away, it began taking on even greater significance.

South Africa announce packed season

South Africa announced a packed international and domestic 2007-08 season, which includes as many as seven international tours for the national team, the inaugural World Twenty20 Championship as well as the regular domestic calendar.The season begins with South Africa’s first tour to Ireland, which begins this week, for a series of ODIs against the hosts and India. The squad, captained by Jacques Kallis, includes a number of new players.Subsequently, there are tours to Pakistan, Zimbabwe, India and Bangladesh, while New Zealand and West Indies are due to visit South Africa. In September, before the tour to Pakistan, they host the first Twenty20 championship.Gerald Majola, CEO Cricket South Africa, said, “This is going to be a bumper season for South African cricket, both domestically and internationally. The new season, which kicks off with the tour to Ireland this month, will include seven international tours and the hosting of the inaugural World Twenty20 South Africa in 2007.”We believe that the Twenty20 format is going to bring in a new audience for cricket, and we believe this interest will spread to other forms of the game. On the international front, we will be using this season to increase the pool of Proteas players so that we can meet the challenges of this busy 2007/8 season.”

Cozier slams ICC funding of Associate tournament

Tony Cozier, the veteran Caribbean journalist and broadcaster, has launched a scathing attack on the way the ICC funds global cricket outside the Test-playing countries.Writing in his column which is syndicated throughout the Caribbean, Cozier was angry at the way that established regions, such as West Indies, were not allocated more money instead of so much being spent by the ICC on Associate competitions.”Certainly there is no ICC venture more illogical or costly than the one dubbed the Intercontinental Cup,” he wrote. “It is an annual tournament, described by the ICC as its ‘flagship first-class competition’, comprising round-robin, four-day matches between its second tier members, those one below Test status. These are countries where the game has always been based on amateur, weekend, one-day club cricket. They play no four-day domestic matches and almost certainly never will.”Yet the ICC doles out heaven knows how much cash every year to fly them, and their own entourage of officials, across the world and to house and feed them at venues as scattered as Aberdeen, Dublin, Namibia, Toronto, Sharjah and Windhoek.”Canada were unable to raise their strongest team for the African tour because many of their best players simply could not get time off from their jobs. The same problem affects others, rendering the tournament even less relevant.”The ICC maintains that the competition enables players from Associate countries to gain more experience in the longer form of the game.

Samuels' bowling action to be analysed

Marlon Samuels’ action will be scrutinised in England © Cricinfo Ltd
 

Marlon Samuels will undergo independent analysis of his bowling action at the National Cricket Academy, at Loughborough University in England on February 11, after he was reported for a suspected illegal action by the umpires in the third Test between South Africa and West Indies in Durban.Due to the injury to Dwayne Bravo and absence of Chris Gayle, Samuels, a part-time offspin bowler, sent down 21 overs in South Africa’s only innings of the game. On-field umpires Simon Taufel and Aleem Dar and third umpire Brian Jerling reported their doubts over his action, especially with respect to his “fast” deliveries. Roshan Mahanama, the match referee, subsequently informed both the ICC and the West Indies team management of the report, as per the ICC regulations governing the reporting process.Samuels’ analysis will be performed by Dr Mark King, member of the ICC Panel of Human Movement Specialists. The outcome of the analysis is expected within 14 days after the tests, which was confirm whether the offspinner’s action is legal. Although only Samuel’s “fast” deliveries have been reported as suspect, the process requires his action, including the “fast” deliveries, to be analysed.If the analysis confirms that only Samuels’ “fast” deliveries are illegal, then he would be allowed to continue bowling in international cricket without using that delivery but subject to the warning that should he bowl his “fast” ball he would run the risk of being reported a second time.However, if this month’s analysis concludes that Samuels generally bowls with an illegal action, he will be suspended from bowling in international cricket until such time as he has corrected his action and submitted to a fresh independent analysis that concludes that his action has been remedied.Samuels has taken seven Test wickets at 127.00 apiece and 57 ODI wicket at 43.24.

A key figure in the Clarke era steps down

Brad Haddin’s formal retirement announcement has rounded out a quintet of exits from the game around Australia’s unsuccessful Ashes defence in England. First came Ryan Harris, then Michael Clarke, Chris Rogers, Shane Watson and now finally Haddin, though he was always likely to exit the international game at the end of the series.Unfortunately for Haddin, his revelation arrived not in the midst of victory celebrations at The Oval, but at the SCG some weeks after he had left the tour early. Like Watson, Haddin dropped out of the side following defeat in the first Test in Cardiff, and while family issues complicated matters, his international career was effectively over from the moment he was unable to present himself for selection at Lord’s.When he was not reinstated for the Edgbaston Test despite improvement in the health of his ill daughter Mia, Haddin took the decision without rancour. Instead it was senior team-mates who raised hackles about the sequence of events, leading to frank exchanges between them, the coach Darren Lehmann and chairman of selectors Rod Marsh. It may never be quantified how much this affected the Ashes campaign; what it did indicate was the exceptionally high regard in which Haddin was held by his fellow players.”Brad was a vital player during an important period in Australian cricket,” the Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland said. “His tenacity with bat and gloves was matched with an unflinching will to win which made him the foundation of a changing team.”Brad’s strong performances and positive influence on the team were all the more remarkable given he was dealing with the serious illness suffered by his daughter Mia. He showed true leadership at the most difficult of times and proved a loyal deputy to Michael Clarke when appointed vice-captain from the 2013 Ashes series. Brad can be enormously proud of his contribution to Australian cricket on and off the field.”A Test debut in 2008 suggests a career of seven years’ duration. But by that point Haddin had already been Adam Gilchrist’s deputy for eight years, having made his international debut in January 2001. He was a reserve wicketkeeper on the 2005 Ashes tour, and frequently played ODI matches as a batsman prior to Gilchrist’s retirement. The way Haddin bided his time was another source of admiration among his peers.When he did finally gain a baggy green, Haddin did so at a time of flux for the team, following a raft of retirements and the recalibration of Ricky Ponting’s captaincy amid a major drain on resources. Haddin’s physical toughness was shown by the fact he suffered a broken finger on Test debut when taking a wayward Mitchell Johnson delivery down the leg side, yet he continued to play.A first Test hundred duly arrived in his ninth Test, a spanking 169 against New Zealand in Adelaide that remained his highest score. While serviceable against all nations, Haddin habitually saved his best for Ashes bouts, and in both 2009 and 2010-11 he was among Australia’s staunchest performers in a pair of series lost in contrasting but equally galling fashions. Haddin’s personal contributions did not serve to reduce his hurt at these defeats.Another reverse took place in April 2011 when Haddin was passed over for the job of Michael Clarke’s vice-captain. However injuries to Shane Watson meant Haddin was to effectively take on the role himself anyway, and his outsized personality and strong views on the game were never far from being heard. Clarke had learned a lot about captaincy when being led by Haddin for NSW, and as lieutenant the wicketkeeper proved a useful conduit between the players and their nimble but occasionally withdrawn leader.Haddin’s performances trailed off around this time, and he went to the West Indies in 2012 with Matthew Wade pressuring him for his spot. The looming duel did not eventuate however, as a grim prognosis for Mia left Haddin to fly abruptly home to Sydney and forget entirely about the game. He spent much of the rest of the year at his daughter’s bedside, and after her gradual improvement led him back to NSW ranks he returned frequently, even within matches.The press and New South Wales players watch Brad Haddin at his retirement press conference•Getty Images

There was to be no immediate Australia recall for Haddin, as Wade was preferred by a selection panel looking singlemindedly towards youth. The disastrous 2013 tour of India brought about a change in that tack, an experience Haddin never forgot after flying into Mohali as an injury replacement just as four members of the team had been suspended. Within days of the tour’s completion, he had been formally appointed as Clarke’s deputy.What followed was a gradual build-up to Ashes victory at home. The series in England was lost, but not without promise being shown. Equally important was the emergence of Steven Smith as a batsman and future leader. He had developed a close relationship with Haddin, and was his deputy on the Australia A tour that preceded the Ashes. Haddin very nearly squeaked the Australians to victory in the Trent Bridge Test, but ended the series confident that better results would unfold at home.From the first day of the series to the last, Haddin was everywhere. He passed 50 in every first innings of the five Tests, and was a constant, harrying presence with the bat and in the field. He helped Clarke marshal the troops and provided the keenest possible support for a pace attack that operated in perfect sync. Offspinner Nathan Lyon was another man to benefit from Haddin’s counsel and confidence.When the 5-0 sweep was completed, Johnson took the series award, but it could quite easily have gone to Haddin. Australia went on from this triumph to further glory in South Africa, clinching a notable away series victory on the final evening of the third Test in Cape Town. Haddin was characteristically vocal in the field and neat behind the stumps, but his run gathering dropped off sharply, starting a decline that would lead to a poor final Test in Cardiff, 15 months later.Over this time Haddin remained a key figure in the team, overseeing the proliferation of an openly hostile brand of cricket that reached heights of unsociability in Cape Town and then at the MCG during the World Cup final victory over New Zealand. Haddin orchestrated send-offs for New Zealand’s batsmen, as part of an uncompromising approach he never shied away from, irrespective of its unpopularity.But like many others he was drained by the death of Phillip Hughes, and never again regained the brilliance of his batting at home against England. At times during that series, Haddin seemed to enjoy outrageous helpings of good fortunes, as though his luck had finally turned. It may now be said that he used up nearly all of his helpings of providence during that giddy series, yet the selectors valued him so highly that they kept him on well after it was clear his game had fallen into disrepair.Haddin is not done entirely with cricket. He will keep playing for the Sydney Sixers in the BBL, and a coaching future beckons. The breadth of Haddin’s footprint on the Australian game will be glimpsed in how Smith now leads the national team, and in how his successor in Tests Peter Nevill goes about his business behind the stumps. An era is ending with Haddin, but his expertise is unlikely to be lost.

Saleem Mukuddem announces his retirement

Saleem Mukuddem celebrates his third wicket against Bangladesh © Getty Images

Bermuda’s allrounder Saleem Mukuddem announced his retirement from international cricket following his country’s disappointing World Cup campaign.Mukuddem was one of the few players to emerge with credit, taking 3 for 19 in the final match against Bangladesh. He finished with five wickets at 13.80.But in an email to the Royal Gazette and Gus Logie, the coach, he explained his decision was brought about by the decision to suspend him for the second match of the competition after he reportedly missed a social engagement.”The handling of a recent off-field event has convinced me that this is the right time for my decision,” he wrote. “I have lived the dream and have enjoyed most of it valuing the friendships I have made along the way the most. Like most journeys I have reached my destination and I look forward to new challenges. I am looking forward to spending more time with my family and resuming my professional career.”Dean Minors has also hinted that he will retire and it is expected he will confirm this to the Royal Gazette shortly.

Steyn reaches No.1 in Test rankings

Dale Steyn needed just 22 matches to reach the top © AFP
 

Dale Steyn, the South African fast bowler, has taken joint No.1 spot in the ICC Test rankings with the Sri Lankan offspinner Muttiah Muralitharan after another match-winning performance in the second Test against India in Ahmedabad. Since October 2007, Steyn has picked up 75 wickets in 11 Tests, including two ten-wicket hauls at home against New Zealand. Muralitharan’s team-mate, Kumar Sangakkara, has been displaced from the top Test batsmen by the Australian Michael Hussey.Both Steyn and Muralitharan are tied on 897 points, with Muralitharan slipping below 900 points for the first time since June 2006. Steyn’s 5 for 23 demolished India for a paltry 76 in the first innings in Ahmedabad and he finished with match figures of 8 for 114. Steyn needed just 22 matches to reach the top, making him among the quickest to reach the summit. Former South African fast bowlers Shaun Pollock and Allan Donald took 33 and 41 matches respectively before they were No.1.Sangakkara’s disappointing two-Test series in the West Indies, during which he scored 95 runs, meant he slipped to third. Hussey, who moved up one place, is currently the only batsman with more than 900 points. Jacques Kallis, the South African batsman who scored his 30th Test century in Ahmedabad, has moved up two places and shares second spot with Ricky Ponting. Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s match-winning 86 in the second Test against Sri Lanka in Port of Spain has seen him move into joint seventh position with the Mahela Jayawardene.Having failed to register a series win after being held 1-1 by West Indies, Sri Lanka have dropped from third to fifth, one below England. India are under pressure to retain their No.2 spot and must win the third Test in Kanpur to maintain their ranking. A draw or a defeat will see them drop two places to fourth.For the full list of rankings,click here.

ICC Test Rankings – Batting

ICC Player Rankings
Rank

Name

Country

Rating

AUS 912
SA 899
AUS 899
SL 893
PAK 880
AUS 860
SL 810
WI 810
PAK 799
ENG 784
  Top 100

ICC Test Rankings – Bowling

ICC Player Rankings
Rank

Name

Country

Rating

SL 897
SA 897
AUS 829
AUS 795
SA 789
IND 715
SL 709
NZ 688
PAK 684
ENG 665
  Top 100

LG ICC ODI Championship

22 Mar 2008

Team Matches Points Rating
South Africa 43 5478 127
Australia 44 5597 127
New Zealand 38 4312 113
India 56 6330 113
Pakistan 33 3595 109
Sri Lanka 44 4716 107
England 40 4200 105
West Indies 37 3567 96
Bangladesh 35 1684 48
Ireland 11 217 20
Zimbabwe 31 552 18
Kenya 6 0 0

Surrey sign Usman Afzaal on three-year deal

Surrey have signed Usman Afzaal on a three-year contract. Ufzaal, 30, left Northamptonshire by mutual consent last week.Afzaal started his career at Nottinghamshire, making three England appearances during the 2001 Ashes. He moved to Northamptonshire in 2004 where he was consistent, and this season he scored 570 runs at 35.62 in eight Championship matches.”I want to continue to learn more about myself and my game and feel a new challenge, in a new environment will help me achieve this,” Afzaal said. “To learn from and play with the likes of Alan and Mark Butcher and Mark Ramprakash will be an honour and something I’m looking forward to.”My dream is to play more cricket for England and I see this move to Surrey – where I will be under pressure to prove myself in a quality side – as a stepping stone to being recognised by the English selectors once more.”Alan Butcher, Surrey’s cricket manager, welcomed the addition to his squad. “With some of our top batsmen nearing the end of their careers, it was important for us to acquire a proven and experienced player approaching his prime. I believe Usman to be ambitious, both for himself and for the club and think that he has vital parts to play as the rebuilding of the team continues.”

Woolmer's body arrives in South Africa

A casket containing Woolmer’s body arrived at Cape Town on Sunday morning © AFP

The body of Bob Woolmer has arrived in South Africa after Jamaican officials gave permission on April 23 for it to be released and handed back to his family.A casket bearing Woolmer’s embalmed body arrived at the Cape Town International Airport shortly before 10:00 am (0800 GMT) on a South African Airways Flight from London. The Doves funeral group confirmed that the wooden casket wrapped in plastic being offloaded from the Boeing 747 contained Woolmer’s remains.”The body would be kept at a mortuary while his family makes funeral arrangements,” Theo Rix, the Doves Western Cape general manager, told AFP. “We are meeting the family tomorrow morning to make the final arrangements.”Woolmer’s body was in Jamaica since his murder on March 18 having been held back for the inquest scheduled for April 23. But instead the coroner allowed the body to be released and postponed the inquest indefinitely in light of what he described to be “significant developments.”Gill, Woolmer’s widow, who lives in Cape Town’s Pinelands neighbourhood, has previously said her English-born husband’s cremation ceremony would be a private family affair.

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