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The end of the nineties era

Hundred at last: Sachin Tendulkar gets a century after getting out seven times in the nineties last year © Getty Images
 

No more nervous nineties
Everything seemed routine with Sachin Tendulkar’s hundred until he took his helmet off and punched his fists in the air. Looking up to the skies, he let out a mighty whoop and held the gladiatorial pose for a few seconds. The standing ovation appeared to go forever, with Tendulkar acknowledging the various stands at what a banner called the “Sachin Cricket Ground”. He had endured seven nineties in 2007, including three innings of 99 in one-dayers, but the new year has brought more luck.Fire and frustration
Sourav Ganguly resembled an angry gardener when he was dismissed. Batting as if in a dream, he waltzed to 67 without worry when, against the run of play, he chipped to Michael Hussey at mid-off. Unable to control his frustration, he turned his back to the umpire, stood with his legs apart and smashed his bat against the ground as if digging a pit. He probably wanted to bury himself.Bhajji pulls one out of the hat
Just as it appeared that Tendulkar would need to shield the tail, with Harbhajan Singh starting a bit edgily, out came a sensational pull shot. Brett Lee dug one short and Harbhajan moved back and across before smacking it through midwicket for four. He even had his front leg in the air as he played it and a calypso in the background would have worked perfectly.Fabulous 400
A day after spilling two relatively simple catches, Adam Gilchrist finally brought up his 400th Test dismissal in the second session. Brett Lee’s offcutter forced Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s edge and Gilchrist accepted the comfortable take to become the second man after Mark Boucher to reach the milestone. No. 401 arrived two overs later when Anil Kumble fell the same way, but 402 was delayed when a top edge from Harbhajan bobbled from Gilchrist’s gloves after he leaped to intercept it.Tail turns the tale
Australian frustrations grew as India approached and then passed their 463. Andrew Symonds, Matthew Hayden and Ricky Ponting had a lengthy chat with Harbhajan before uncharacteristic sloppiness in the field. Things grew worse when Ishant Sharma collected 23, which was 16 more than his previous highest first-class score, and the innings more than doubled his career haul of 15 in his first 17 matches.

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.

South Africa ponder over Pollock

Shaun Pollock is unlikely to play at the Wanderers © Getty Images

Mickey Arthur, South Africa’s coach, has indicated that Shaun Pollock might not play the first Test against New Zealand starting at the Wanderers on Thursday. According to Arthur, the winning XI who won the Test series against Pakistan in October would probably take the field.”We’re very much a squad and there’s always going to be one guy that misses out,” Arthur was quoted as saying by the website. “The spinner [Paul Harris] has made a huge impact for us – he’s bowled particularly well – so I don’t think we’ll tinker too much. We’ll have a look at the conditions later and see where we go, but it’s still very much a squad system. If conditions warrant it, Polly [Pollock] will play.”Pollock was dropped for the first time in his 107-Test career during the Pakistan series with captain Graeme Smith explaining that it was a tactical decision to rest Pollock and give some young fast bowlers exposure to alien conditions.That successful series over, Arthur was not very worried about his bowlers having to switch from Pakistan’s flatter surfaces to the bouncier ones at home. “We need to get back into our own conditions quickly, and prepare accordingly,” he said. “The guys are skilled and good enough to make the change quickly.”That’s part and parcel of international sport – you change disciplines pretty quickly. We just have to tighten up our defences and tighten up our skills in the nets, so we’ll be fine. I’m hoping by the end of today the players will be back in Test-match mode.”

Harwood five seals Victoria success


Scorecard

Mark Cosgrove’s 92 wasn’t enough to push South Australia to victory © Getty Images

Shane Harwood’s five wickets helped Victoria seal their second win in a week against South Australia in Adelaide. While the Pura Cup victory was emphatic, this match was tighter, with South Australia showing some fight before losing their way at the end.The home side was boosted by the return of Shaun Tait, who showed what it had been missing with three wickets on return from a long lay-off. On a perfect spring day, he sprang back from elbow surgery, pursuing a typically full, and prosperous, line.He was the pick, even though Ryan Harris added his first five-wicket haul, including three in an over, while Dan Cullen offered a tight mid-innings spell. “He stood out,” the captain Nathan Adcock said of Tait, who he used in several one-over bursts. “A class above. I reckon he’s still got a bit more up his sleeve.”Tait may reveal just what next week in Hobart, where South Australia will head encouraged by their showing here. Concerns remain over a brittle top order, not least with Cameron Borgas, who made three ducks in a week to forget.Batting first, Victoria managed 263 on a turning pitch, thanks largely to Aiden Blizzard’s first one-day fifty and Cameron White’s slick 76. Blizzard cut and pulled his way to 72 and hit nine fours before he was trapped by one which skidded through off Dan Cullen, although replays suggested a thin edge.Despite a strong start in the second innings, the Bushrangers had to stave off the challenge from Mark Cosgrove, who made 92. He was beginning to threaten with Adcock (49) before the captain played a full toss too late from the excellent Harwood, who once again showed his one-day class, finding swing and fully deserving his 5 for 45. Bryce McGain, who was on debut aged 35, also bowled tidily, cleaning up the fellow first-gamer Andy Delmont (13) and profiting from Ryan Harris’ headrush on 19.Cosgrove, who fell to the mischevious tweak of White, and Adcock added 121 from 124 balls, and while they were together the momentum was firmly with South Australia, who finally looked to have discovered a sliver of the confidence badly lacking earlier this week. But their chase fell away in the face of some excellent bowling.

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.

Glamorgan team for the Twenty20 match against Somerset

Glamorgan have announced an unchanged team for their secondTwenty20 match against the Somerset Sabres at Sophia Gardens,Cardiff on 18th June, starting at 5.30pm:

RDB Croft *IJ ThomasMJ PowellMP MaynardDL HempA DaleMA Wallace +MS KasprowiczSD ThomasDS HarrisonDA Cosker

There will be live ball-by-ball commentary of the game available via the BBC RadioWales website. To listen in click on the link at the top of theGlamorgan homepage.

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

Dravid's hundred in vain again

Northamptonshire 319 for 7 (Hussey 123) beat Scotland 244 (Dravid 114) by 75 runs
ScorecardRahul Dravid scored his third hundred of the season for Scotland but, like his two previous centuries, this one ended up in a losing cause as well, as Northamptonshire triumphed by 75 runs in a National Cricket League match. Dravid struck a magnificent 114 off just 102 balls – in the process crossing 500 runs for the season in his ninth innings – but Scotland were never in the hunt after Northamptonshire had amassed 319 in 45 overs.The match was billed as a clash between Mike Hussey – Northamptonshire’s overseas player – and Rahul Dravid, and it lived up to the hype. Hussey scored a 115-ball 123 as Northamptonshire piled on the runs. He was well supported by Philip Jacques (76) and David Sales (53).Dravid, by contrast, had little support. Neil McRae (38) was the only other batsman to cross 35, while two of the top six got ducks. Coming to the crease at 16 for 2, Dravid stitched together an 86-run third-wicket stand with McRae and a 72-run partnership for the ninth wicket with Gregor Maiden, before being the last man to be dismissed.Click here to read about Dravid’s season with Scotland.

Smith makes an early impression

Age is only a number, as Steve Waugh and Alec Stewart have been telling us all for several years now. But when Graeme Smith was appointed as South Africa’s new captain at the age of 22, several eyebrows were instantly raised. Smith, though, has answered his critics in the manner he knows best, and today at Edgbaston he became the youngest captain to score a Test century.The following captains have scored Test centuries before the age of 24:

Age Name Score Match22 173 GC Smith 178* SA v Eng Birmingham 200322 273 Javed Miandad 106* Pak v Aus Faisalabad 1979-8023 39 Nawab of Pataudi jr 203* Ind v Eng Delhi 1963-6423 255 SR Tendulkar 169 Ind v SA Cape Town 1996-9723 273 Nawab of Pataudi jr 128* Ind v Aus Madras 1964-65

If that wasn’t enough, Smith has secured another record, in conjunction with Herschelle Gibbs. That pair added 368 for the first wicket in the Test against Pakistan at Cape Town earlier this year, and today, with their stand of 338, Gibbs and Smith became the first opening pair to make two triple-century Test partnerships. They are only the second pair to have achieved that feat for any wicket, after Bill Ponsford and Don Bradman, who added 388 for Australia’s fourth wicket and 451 for the second, in successive Tests against England at Leeds and The Oval in 1934.Gibbs also shared an unbeaten partnership of 315 for the second wicket with Jacques Kallis against New Zealand at Christchurch in 1998-99. He thus joins Javed Miandad in having shared in three triple-century Test partnerships. Only Don Bradman (5) has had a share in more.

Dalmiya takes over as president of ACC

Jagmohan Dalmiya: an Asian experience ahead© AFP

Jagmohan Dalmiya, the president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India, has taken over as president of the Asian Cricket Council (ACC). Dalmiya was appointed to the post at the annual general body of the council in London on Wednesday.Speaking to the Indo-Asian News Service, Anil Kalaver, the secretary of the Singapore Cricket Association said: “I am pleased to inform you that as of yesterday [Tuesday], Jagmohan Dalmiya is the ACC president and Jai Kumar Nath Shah of Nepal is the vice president.”Dalmiya takes over from Mohammad Ali Asghar, the president of the Bangladesh Cricket Board, who recently completed his two-year term. According to the rotational policy for the presidency of the ACC, it was the turn of the BCCI – and Dalmiya, being its head, took over.Dalmiya, who earlier served as the president of the ICC, will remain in the post for two years, pending a nomination from the BCCI in September when he completes his three-year term as their president.