Customs face KRL in 'must win' tie

Defending champions Pakistan Customs face KRL in a crucialeighth round encounter of the Patron’s Trophy Grade-INational Cricket Championship from Friday at Niaz Stadium inHyderabad.After two successive draws against PWD and PIA on the docilestrip at UBL Sports Complex despite forcing both theirrivals to follow-on, Customs must win against KRL withmaximum points to keep alive their slim hopes of retainingthe title.National Bank, six points clear of second-placed Customs,meanwhile, are praying for better weather in Sheikhupura fortheir clash against a resurgent WAPDA side. Last season’srunners-up had to settle for just three points against HabibBank in a match which saw more than 175 overs being lost tobad light.WAPDA, in third spot, scored a miraculous six-run victoryover winless Sui Gas in the previous round to put themselvesin contention for first major honours.Even if the Sheikhupura tie fails to produce an outrightresult in National Bank’s favour, the bankers have probablythe easiest final round fixture – against minnows Sui Gas inFaisalabad. – that could see them become champions.ADBP, in fourth spot, meet PIA on a result-oriented pitch atNational Stadium. This could be an interesting tusslebetween two evenly-matched sides on paper. Team winning thetoss will definitely opt to field first.ADBP go into this encounter with psychological advantage ofa two-day win over PWD based on young opener Inam-ul-Haq’sflawless maiden first-class century.PIA, on the other hand, were fortunate to escape defeatagainst an injury-hit Customs bowling attack. However, theform of young Faisal Iqbal was a huge plus point for theformer champions.Seven-time champions Habib Bank have an ideal opportunity tomove up the ladder against the luckless Sui Gas, who havelost all but one of their seven fixtures so far. They meetat Pindi Cricket Stadium.The draw is the most likely result in the Allied Bank-PWDtie at UBL Sports Complex.Eighth round schedule (Nov 2-5):Allied Bank v PWD at UBL Sports Complex, Karachi (Umpires:Afzaal Ahmed and Masroor Ali. Match referee: Sajid Abbasi).PIA v ADBP at National Stadium, Karachi (Umpires: Mian Aslamand Sadiq Mohammad. Match referee: Ghafoor Butt).Pakistan Customs v KRL at Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad (Umpires:Shakeel Khan and Feroz Butt. Match referee: Naeem Ahmed).National Bank v WAPDA at Sheikhupura Stadium (Umpires: Z.I.Pasha and Iqbal Butt. Match referee: Ehteshamuddin).Habib Bank v Sui Gas at Pindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi(Umpires: Iftikhar Malik and Aleem Dar. Match referee:Musaddeq Rasool).

Pujara's fighting ton holds India together

Live scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAngelo Mathews picked up the crucial wicket of Virat Kohli early in the day•AFP

Cheteshwar Pujara, previously out of the side to presumably accommodate a more forceful batsman and an extra bowler, scored his first Test century since the last month of 2013 to deny Sri Lanka clear advantage in the rain-hit SSC Test. He was helped along by Amit Mishra’s third Test fifty, an enterprising effort, to rescue India after Dhammika Prasad had reduced India to 180 for 7. It was thanks largely to Prasad that Sri Lanka didn’t lose the advantage of bowling first on a pitch with uneven grass covering, which offered seam movement and variable bounce. Pujara and Mishra added 104, the highest eighth-wicket stand for India against Sri Lanka, the highest at SSC, with Mishra’s 59 the highest by a No. 9 at SSC.Given almost a whole day’s play has been lost to rain, India might just have enough to feel they can’t lose the Test. They can thank Pujara for that. Batting above his preferred station, thanks only to injuries to the openers in the side, Pujara knew he had a brief window to make impact to earn a long-time return. On a pitch as challenging as this, the impact was not going to be immediate, but any runs he scored would be valuable. And he scored an unbeaten 135 of them out of India’s 292 for 8.Immediate impact was left for Prasad. That Sri Lanka ran the risk of wasting the conditions is evident from how they had to bowl 37 overs of spin out of 95.3 on a seaming pitch. Angelo Mathews, the third seamer, doesn’t bowl long spells because of back issues, and Prasad bowled only short spells. In the short spells, though, he struck instantly. He took out KL Rahul in the first over of the match, nearly had Virat Kohli in the first over on the second morning, took out Rohit Sharma with the last ball before lunch and Stuart Binny with the first after, and then R Ashwin with the first ball back.The first wicket of the day, though, went to Mathews, and that too after Kohli had survived a close call off Prasad and seen his burst off. He just couldn’t help pushing defensively at wide balls that he is better off leaving alone. In England, it proved to be Kohli’s downfall. In Australia and in the two previous Tests, the ball hardly seamed so Kohli kept getting away with it. This time he nicked off.This brought together two men whom a fully fit India XI might not have space for: Pujara and Rohit, the last two specialist batsmen. After surviving a streaky chip early in the innings and then successfully taking Rangana Herath’s spin on, Rohit once again fell just before an interval. In the previous Test, his dismissal brought an end to the day’s play; here he ended the first session. Prasad pitched close enough to make Rohit push at this, and the ball just held its line to take the edge. This was the fifth ball of the over, but lunch was taken immediately. Post the break, India’s suspect No. 6 Stuart Binny came out to bat. He got a near perfect ball, a ball you can’t mean to bowl. You can only hope that a ball shaping up as an outswinger pitches on the seam and then jags back the other way. That’s what happened with the first ball after lunch, and Binny was trapped lbw for a golden duck.Naman Ojha, the debutant, went on to have an important partnership with Pujara. But once the two had worn the bowlers out, with the ball 60 overs old, Ojha holed out when slogging against Tharindu Kuashal, who provides loose balls if you wait for them.Ask Pujara. He had to wait and wait and wait in the first session, leaving balls alone outside off, defended when they made him play, absorbing the pressure dot after dot after dot. He didn’t feel the itch to score runs even when he spent 23 balls on the score of 31. At times he even shaped up to play at balls, and then withdrew at the last moment realising they were outside off and not seaming in.Pujara was provided a release by the inconsistent Kaushal. He had come on for the first time 30 minutes before lunch, and offered a long half-volley. Pujara had only just got off 31, and he unfurled a cover drive for four and then cut a short ball past slip. Then came a good delivery, but Pujara was in a different mood now, and drove through point. He also drove Prasad to the boundary off the back foot, a shot Pujara had shelved earlier.Pujara reached his fifty minutes before lunch, and well known for accelerating after passing through an early period of defence, he went from 31 off 91 to 101 off 219.Pujara found a perfect partner in Mishra. After Ashwin had fallen to a loose push outside off, Mishra came in full of intent. He refused to get bogged down, didn’t play the most orthodox shots, but succeeded in frustrating the tired Sri Lankan bowlers. Pujara showed full faith in Mishra’s abilities, and the two stole the initiative from Sri Lanka who would have had hopes of batting for a major part of the final session.Although a few balls turned and bounced from the edge of a grassy patch on the pitch, which should encourage India should the match go into the fourth innings, the pitch had by and large settled down by now. The ball did seam, but Sri Lanka didn’t help themselves by bowling either too short or two full at Mishra. By the time Sri Lanka finally found a way past Mishra, who got too close to the ball when charging at Herath and was stumped off his pads, the clouds had come in and cost the Test another hour. Only 95.3 overs were bowled in the first two days.

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.”

Bangladesh scamper home by three wickets

ScorecardAfter a sequence of one-sided games, the fifth and final one-dayer at Dhaka went down to the wire as Bangladesh scampered home by three wickets against Zimbabwe, sweeping the series 5-0.Chasing a modest 194, Bangladesh were coasting to victory before a middle-order collapse, orchestrated by Gary Brent, pegged them back. Habibul Bashar, the captain, repeated what Inzamam-ul-Haq did earlier this week against West Indies, marshalling the lower-order and setting a good example with an ice-cool unbeaten 32 to steer Bangladesh home in difficult circumstances.After having restricted Zimbabwe to 193 for 8 thanks to another disciplined bowling performance, the Bangladesh openers, Shahriar Nafees and and Mehrab Hossain Jnr got off to a sound start. They added 86 as the pace bowlers, particularly Elton Chigumbura, came in for some stick.With no breakthrough in sight, captain Prosper Utseya switched to the military medium pace of Gary Brent and the tactic worked as he picked up two wickets in his second over. It appeared that the wicket suddenly changed in character as both Nafees and Aftab were trapped in front by deliveries that kept low. Brent then captured the wickets of Mohammad Ashraful and Mehrab Hossain in similar fashion, and Zimbabwe were right back into the contest, having also managed to put a stranglehold on the scoring rate.Bashar and Saqibul Hasan then resurrected the chase, adding a valuable 25 for the fifth wicket. However, a farcical run out in the 39th over pegged Bangladesh back again. Hasan attempted a tentative second run off an overthrow and fell short of the crease at the batsmen’s end, throwing the game wide open. Brent was back in business two overs later as he pouched a difficult chance at mid-on to send back Mashrafe Mortaza. Farhad Reza was the second run-out victim in the innings and Zimbabwe sensed a rare consolation win. Bashar kept his cool and along with Mushfiqur Rahim, brought in for this match, the pair guided Bangladesh home with an over to spare.Earlier, opener Stuart Matsikenyeri, who top-scored with 75, was the only Zimbabwe batsman to offer some resistance as the rest faltered yet again. Put into bat, Zimbabwe got off to a steady start, as Matsikenyeri and Chamu Chibhabha added 63 for the second wicket after debutant Tino Mowoyo fell in the eighth over. Matsikenyeri and Chigumbura took the score to 138 in the 25th over, but the dismissal of Chigumbura, caught behind by Mushfiqur Rahim off Mehrab Hossain, sparked a collapse.Matsikenyeri, well set to record his first century in one-dayers, fell for 75 soon after, giving Hossain his second wicket. Fast bowler Mortaza returned to take the last three wickets in a lively spell at the death. He finished with 3 for 36 while left-arm spinner Abdur Razzak, Bangladesh’s most effective bowler in the series, did his bit in the middle overs with an economical spell of 1 for 27 off his quota of ten overs.

Ireland storm into final

Scorecard
Kenya’s captain Steve Tikolo won the toss and put his side in against Ireland in the final of the Intercontinental Cup at Windhoek.On the evidence of the two semi-finals, batting first will be a huge advantage in the three-day contest. Both games were drawn, but big first-innings totals from the side batting first guaranteed big points that sent them through. The two semi-finals produced 2237 runs for the loss of just 48 wickets, so a run-fest may not be out of the question in the final.Ireland make two changes to the side that beat UAE in the semis, bringing in Andre Botha and Andrew White for Paul Mooney and Greg Thompson. Kenya remain unchanged from their victory over Bermuda.Kenya Kennedy Otieno (wk), Maurice Ouma, Tony Suji, Steve Tikolo (capt), Hitesh Modi, Collins Obuya, Mohammad Sheikh, Thomas Odoyo, Lameck Onyango, Peter Ongondo, Martin Suji.Ireland Jeremy Bray, Dominick Joyce, Eoin Morgan, Niall O’Brien (wk), Andre Botha, Trent Johnston (capt), Peter Gillespie, Andrew White, Conor Armstrong, Kyle McCallan, Adrian McCoubrey.

Harmison opts out of Zimbabwe tour

Steve Harmison has taken a moral stand on the Zimbabwe issue and decided to not tour© Getty Images

Steve Harmison has ruled himself out of England’s controversial tour ofZimbabwe, which is to take place in November. The series consists of five one-dayers and no Tests.Harmison decided to boycott the trip for political and sporting reasons. A few months ago, Stuart MacGill publicly stated his intention to not visit Zimbabwe for the same reasons.”In all honesty,” said Harmison to the , “my decision was made in Cape Town over 18 months ago when England’s World Cup squad spent a horrendous four days before finally deciding not to go to Harare.”Nothing has changed for me. The situation there is worse now – that’s whatthe official reports say – and Zimbabwe’s top players have been sacked.”A spokesman for the England & Wales Cricket Board said that Harmison was the only player to have expressed a desire to stay at home, but added that no disciplinary action would be taken.”Stephen Harmison informed Duncan Fletcher and Michael Vaughan following the ICC Champions Trophy match against Sri Lanka that he did not want to be considered for selection for the forthcoming tour of Zimbabwe.”As the ECB has concluded that the tour must go ahead subject to it being safe and secure to do so, we have asked all the current England players and management to make themselves available. Stephen Harmison is the only player to have informed the board that he will be unavailable for the tour.”The ECB has previously stated that any player who makes himself unavailable to tour Zimbabwe for reasons of personal conscience will not be penalised and this remains our position.”

Wasim Akram, Mullally and Giddins miss Northamptonshire match

Alan Mullally with a strained hamstring, Wasim Akram with an injured toe and Ed Giddins rested are all absent for Hampshire’s next Frizzell Championship match against Northamptonshire starting on Wednesday (2nd July – 11.00am).Mullally pulled up in the recent match against Gloucestershire, Wasim was hit on the toe whilst batting against Ian Harvey.Two young bowlers James Bruce and James Tomlinson come in as replacements. Also added to the squad is John Francis, like Tomlinson recently returned from University duties. Bruce made his Championship debut against Somerset in May.Hampshire: Derek Kenway, John Crawley (captain), Simon Katich, Robin Smith, Will Kendall, John Francis, Nic Pothas (wicket-keeper), Dimitri Mascarenhas, Shaun Udal, James Bruce and James Tomlinson.

One-day tickets on sale tomorrow

Tickets for the VB Series One Day Internationals matches at the Gabba will go on sale tomorrow.The One Day International weekend in January is one of Queensland’s big ticket sporting events, with sell-out crowds at the past two day/night matches involving Australia at the Gabba.The world champion Australian team will meet South Africa on Sunday January 20, with New Zealand taking on South Africa in the other day/night VB Series match on Saturday January 19.Australia ‘A’ will also be in action again, playing New Zealand in a day/night tour match on January 8 at the Gabba.Ticket holders for all international matches at the Gabba this season will be eligible for free public transport to and from the venue on match days this season as part of an agreement between Queensland Cricket and CityTrans.Tickets are available through all Ticketmaster7 outlets in Queensland from 9am tomorrow, or by calling the Ticketmaster7 sportscharge line on 13 61 22. Tickets may also be purchased through Ticketmaster7’s website on www.ticketmaster.com.au.The first 1500 tickets purchased online through Ticketmaster7 will also attract a bonus of a free double pass to the XXXX Queensland Bulls opening ING Cup match against the Western Warriors at the Gabba on October 21. This offer is only available for online purchases.

'Gutted' Anderson misses out for final Test

James Anderson could have played his final Ashes Test after being ruled out of the last installment of this campaign at the Kia Oval due to the side strain he sustained at Edgbaston.Anderson had hoped to recover in time to return to the side, but Alastair Cook said that he had only been able to bowl at “60-70%” during England’s training sessions on Monday and Tuesday. Cook also confirmed that barring any late injury problems England will name an unchanged team which means they will resist any temptation to give Adil Rashid a debut.Although Anderson has said that he has ambitions to extend his England career for considerable time to come, at the age of 33 nothing is certain for a fast bowler. The next Ashes series is in Australia during the 2017-18 season.”Unfortunately Jimmy isn’t going to make it. He’s gutted about it,” Cook said. “He’s made real good progress from where he was at Edgbaston but it’s a week or so too early. He bowled in the nets yesterday at about 60-70%, that’s not how you go into a game. He’s worked really hard, it’s just a bit early.”With confirmation that England will retain the same XI which won so convincingly at Trent Bridge it means that Rashid continues to wait for his Test debut. Cook said he was now far more confident around the England set-up having been in the squad throughout the series and can expect to play a role against Pakistan in the UAE.”Clearly Adil has been with us for every squad but the pitches haven’t quite suited two spinners. Adil will have to wait his chance but as a cricketer he’s really improving and he feels a lot more comfortable in the England environment and he’ll probably get his chance in Abu Dhabi.”There were words of encouragement, too, for opener Adam Lyth who has struggled during the series in making 86 runs at 12.28 but there was a hint that this was shaping as a defining Test for Lyth’s short-term prospects.”He hasn’t scored the runs he would have liked, but he made a very good hundred against New Zealand which is where I thought you saw a lot of his talent,” Cook said. “It’s tough when your first seven games are against the bowlers he has faced, but he has to clear that out of his mind. He’s an Ashes-winning player and he can be very proud of that.”He’s been a big part of the squad and he has to go out there over the next five days and score runs. He’s a very good player who can succeed at international level.”

Sreesanth taunts Symonds again

Sreesanth: “Hard luck, you’re going to lose now” © AFP

Sreesanth, India’s fast bowler, has denied clapping in the face of Andrew Symonds after he was dismissed in the fourth one-day match on Monday. Sreesanth, a 12th man in Chandigarh, reportedly had to be calmed down by Stuart Clark, who was also running the drinks, when Symonds was approached between the field and the entry to the dressing room.Sreesanth has had an eventful series after targeting the Australians with his strange behaviour and he apparently continued to argue with Symonds and his team-mates after the eight-run loss. Despite not playing, Sreesanth went to Symonds as he walked off with 75 and observers said he clapped in the batsman’s face.”I said to him: ‘Hard luck, you’re going to lose now,” Sreesanth said in the Australian. “That’s all.” Both the Australian and the Sydney Morning Herald reported the bizarre actions that continued an ugly series, which has its fifth game at Vadodara on Thursday.However, neither Chris Broad, the match referee, or Lalchand Rajput, India’s manager, were aware of the Sreesanth-Symonds incident. Rajput said Sreesanth had been talked to about his behaviour in the early part of the series.”He was told that he has been playing international cricket for long enough now that he should know what is right and wrong,” he told the Herald. Both players also had an on-field argument during the second match in Kochi when Sreesanth tried to run-out Symonds after he had gone to speak with Brad Haddin.

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