Hegg to miss Norwich Union game with dislocated finger

Lancashire Lightning will be fielding a changed side for the Norwich Union League floodlit match against Sussex Sharks at Hove on Tuesday 20th August.Warren Hegg is out of the side after suffering from a dislocated finger onhis right hand during the recent Roses fixture at Old Trafford and JamieHaynes will be keeping wicket until Warren is fit again. Stuart Law stepsin to take the Captains reins with Neil Fairbrother being rested for thematch, Neil will travel down to Hove for the Frizzell County Championshipmatch starting on Thursday. Peter Martin also returns after incurring aside injury.The side in full:

  • Chilton
  • Swann
  • Byas
  • Law (acting Cpt.)
  • Schofield
  • Chapple
  • Haynes
  • Hogg
  • Martin
  • Wood
  • Keedy
  • Anderson
  • Caddick answers his critics by taking 4 for 49

    Andy Caddick was delighted with his bowling figures against Western Australia in Perth today, where he dismissed the top three batsmen before ending with the impressive figures of 4 for 49 from 19.5 overs, which included 9 maidens.At the end of the day the England paceman said: "I know that people criticise me and doubt my ability but all I can do is to do my talking on the pitch. I want to be successful for England on this Ashes tour, especially as I was overlooked the last time."Somerset chief executive Peter Anderson said: "Andrew has expressed his satisfaction with his 4 wicket haul in the first serious game of this Ashes tour and everybody at home is delighted for him."Marcus Trescothick also made light of his reported shoulder injury by taking a catch off his fellow Ciderman and by scoring an unbeaten 21 before the close of play."Earlier the left handed opener said how much he was enjoying his time `down under,’ and how he had linked up with two of his Somerset team mates.He told me: "The weather over here is terrific and the hotels are good. I spent a very enjoyable evening with Piran Holloway and Carl Gazzard who are both spending the winter here in Perth."`Banger’ told me that he was also hoping to get in some golf and a visit to some local horseracing before flying off for the final match before the first Test match in the Ashes series.Regarding his injury he said: "My shoulder isn’t too bad and not as serious as it was first reported. It certainly won’t prevent me playing in the first test match and I have had an injection which is helping things."Looking ahead to the next match and the start of the Ashes series he said: "All the team are in good spirits and feeling confident."

    Strauss hints players might boycott Zimbabwe matches

    Andrew Strauss: ‘There’s a feeling on previous tours that the players have been left in the lurch by both the government and the ECB’ © Getty Images
     

    Andrew Strauss has hinted that England’s players will consider boycotting games against Zimbabwe should the 2009 series against them go ahead.Speaking at the MCC Spirit of Cricket evening at Lord’s, where the guests included Giles Clarke, the ECB chairman, Strauss told an audience of 1400 that if Robert Mugabe stays in power then there was a real chance that some of the team would not be prepared to play against Zimbabwe.”In the past there’ve been opportunities for the government to show the strength of feeling among the general population here and the government chose not to,” he said. “If it comes down to players to do that, we’ll definitely have to look at it.”There’s a feeling on previous tours that the players have been left in the lurch by both the government and the ECB. There’s a great sense among the general population that our last tour to Zimbabwe shouldn’t have gone ahead. It’s come down to a certain extent to personal preference and there have been some tough decisions made in previous tours.”When we come round to the issue again we all hope that the political situation in Zimbabwe is very different. But if it isn’t there are going to be more very difficult decisions to be made.”Strauss was speaking as a member of a panel, along with Barry Richards and Mike Brearley, in a question-and-answer session which followed Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s Spirit of Cricket lecture at Lord’s.Richards said that the ICC had missed an opportunity in not taking action against Zimbabwe before now. “I think the ICC are erring and it frustrates the hell out of me that Zimbabwe have not been brought to book. It’s a moral issue and what he [Robert Mugabe] is doing everybody knows is simply not right … cricket can play a part in that and it’s not.”Click here to listen to the Q&A session as well as Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s Spirit of Cricket lecture

    Windies' flight woes

    The continuing vagaries of air communication in the region left the West Indies cricket team short-handed yesterday.While the ten who actually made it to Georgetown the night before had their first practice session prior to the first Cable & Wireless Test against India, starting at Bourda tomorrow, the three Trinidadians Marlon Black, Merv Dillon and Brian Lara – were waiting for a flight out of Piarco after they were grounded on Monday night.They and team trainer/physio Ronald Rogers were expected by a BWIA flight late yesterday afternoon.They were booked to fly out on Monday night but were bumped off the flight when their plane was grounded with some sort of mechanical failure and was replaced by a smaller aircraft, team manager Ricky Skerritt explained.It’s a bit of a setback as we would obviously have liked everyone to be here as planned, Skerritt said, adding with a knowing shrug: I suppose we’ve come to accept these things by now.As the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) continues to use scheduled flights to transport both teams and officials the length and breadth of the Caribbean during home series, Skerritt’s philosophical reaction is understandable.Six years ago, a One-Day International in St Vincent was in jeopardy as the New Zealand team’s gear only arrived on the morning of the match, two days behind hand.Late departures and arrivals are as commonplace for high-profile international cricketers as they are for the ordinary, long-suffering traveller.There have been suggestions from various quarters that the WICB charter flights instead that would be a more convenient and reliable way of moving the sizeable entourage of players, administrators, umpires and media personnel around.The WICB’s official line for some time has been that it would be more expensive and unnecessary, given that foul-ups are infrequent.With the logistical nightmare it will have to confront when it hosts the 2007 World Cup, the latest disruption is a salutary lesson.Captain Carl Hooper supervised yesterday’s practice session at the Police Sports Club ground but did not actively participate.He is still carefully attending to the injury to his finger sustained in the Busta International Series final against Jamaica in Kingston on Saturday although he confirmed that he is fit enough to play.The finger is bruised, not fractured, and improving with treatment.There was encouraging news for the Indians yesterday as the MRI scan performed on off-spinner Harbhajan Singh’s right shoulder in Port-of-Spain on Monday revealed no significant damage.He was returning to Georgetown on Monday on the same flight as the missing Trinidadians God and BWIA willing and would put the shoulder to the test in the final practice session today.Harbhajan, 21, is a key member of the attack and there was inevitable concern when he complained of pain in the shoulder after throwing a ball from the outfield in India’s warm-up match against the Guyana Cricket Board President’s XI at the Everest Sports Club here Sunday.The Indians took the day off yesterday, presumably satisfied with their preparations.It was a decision that did not entirely correspond with coach John Wright’s comment following their derisive go-slow batting in a pre-arranged limited-overs match Sunday that his players were keen to have some practice.

    India win by four wickets as Sri Lanka go out of the NatWest

    For a side that had to win this match to maintain a chance of reaching the final, Sri Lanka produced a totally inept batting performance, only to fight back well with the ball to keep their hopes alive to the very end. Well though India bowled on a pitch offering considerable help to the seam bowlers, a succession of batsmen did nothing to help by playing what could only be described as injudicious and technically inadequate strokes to end the innings on 187 with ten balls unused. At the fall of Sachin Tendulkar’s wicket, however, Sri Lanka were right back in it, only to run out of fire power as India won, slightly nervously, by four wickets with 11 balls to spare.Sanath Jayasuriya began the Sri Lankan innings by continuing in the form he had re-discovered against England at Headingley. The second ball he received from Zaheer Khan was short and very wide of the off stump. The Sri Lankan captain launched himself at it with a cut that took the ball several rows back into the crowd at point for an extraordinary six.At the other end, Ashish Nehra was finding considerable lateral movement with the ball and had Jayasuriya dropped at second slip by Dinesh Mongia as he slashed yet again. However, Nehra got his revenge when Jayasuriya again waved his bat outside the off stump only to get a bottom edge that dragged the ball onto his wicket.Three overs later, Ajit Agarkar was introduced into the attack and with his first ball induced Romesh Kaluwitharana to chase a wide one and edge to the wicket-keeper. Kaluwitharana looks a mere shadow of the batsmen who terrorised attacks a few years ago and is doing little for the Sri Lankan cause.It was left to Marvan Atapattu and Mahela Jayawardene to apply more conventional technique to the art of batting as they revived the innings with a fifty partnership with elegant rather than excessive strokes to stabilise the position for Sri Lanka.After Marvan Atapattu and Mahela Jayawardene had added 84 for the third wicket, albeit from 118 balls, both batsmen were dismissed in the space of nine balls bowled by Anil Kumble. With the score on 125, Jayawardene gave himself room to hit Kumble inside-out over the covers only to give Ashish Nehra a catch at long off.Atapattu went to his fifty from 70 balls, but before his score had advanced he was beaten in the flight to be bowled by Anil Kumble with a ball that might have just come back into the batsman off the pitch.There was an obvious need for Sri Lanka to rebuild once again rather than pressing on, even though their scoring rate was well below what they might have wanted. However, Avishka Gunawardene tried to pull Khan to mid-wicket but only succeeded in offering a simple catch to backward point, Thilan Samaraweera heaved what might charitably be described as a drive to slip and Russel Arnold sacrificed his wicket. A push to backward point, a hesitation and a throw from Yuvraj Singh to the bowler’s end left him stranded out of the frame.Chaminda Vaas slashed and thrashed to some effect, hitting four boundaries from 20 balls in his innings of 26 before one more slog to deep extra cover brought about his downfall. Upul Chandana tamely chipped Ajit Agarkar to mid-off in his first back and Pramodya Wickramasinghe was run out by Yuvraj again to bring the innings to a premature and most unsatisfactory close.For the second time in consecutive matches, India found themselves a wicket down from the first ball of the innings. At Chester-le-Street it was Sourav Ganguly; this time Virender Sehwag was beaten neck and crop by the first ball from Vaas to be bowled. Things could have got worse for India because Ganguly was adjudged not to have got a touch to the last ball of that over as it brushed something on its way through to the wicket-keeper, and the same batsman was dropped by Chandana at backward point in the following over bowled by Dilhara Fernando.Having dropped that sharp but eminently catchable chance, Chandana was forced to watch as Ganguly and Mongia went about the task of stabilising the innings. They could do so without undue concern about the run rate because of the low target. However, the batsmen were also aware that the ball was still seaming about.Lateral movement had little to do with the dismissal of Mongia when the score had reached 30 in the 13th over. He shaped to turn Vaas to leg, but got a leading edge that sent the ball ballooning to Jayasuriya’s right at mid-off where he held a good catch low down. Vaas ended the over with a loud appeal against Tendulkar as the ball narrowly missed the edge of the bat but brushed the thigh on its way through to Kaluwitharana. It was a cracking delivery, but a little high for an lbw decision.Ganguly’s luck finally ran out in the next over, with Kaluwitharana involved again. Ganguly edged Wickramasinghe to slip where Jayawardene only parried the ball, but straight to the wicket-keeper who completed the catch. Suddenly the Sri Lankan total took on a greater magnitude and, not for the first time in his career, much rested on the shoulders of Tendulkar.So often in the past he has carried the team through whatever crisis it faced, but this time it was not to be. He chipped an easy catch to Fernando at backward point off Chandana only to see the fielder make an awful mess of it. Both Sri Lankans would have been all too aware of each other’s feelings. However, Fernando was brought into the attack next over and his first ball brought about the end of Tendulkar as he pushed a catch into the covers.As ever when a batsman of Tendulkar’s stature goes cheaply, nerves were now jangling. They were not eased when Rahul Dravid tried to turn Fernando to leg, and sent a leading edge into the covers into the hands of Arnold. Sri Lankan celebrations were truncated when it was noticed that the umpire had signalled a no ball for over-stepping.By such slender margins are matches won and lost. Dravid went on in company with Yuvraj Singh to fashion a recovery that led India towards victory. Both usually free-scoring batsmen took their time as the situation demanded. Having halted the fall of wickets, Yuvraj did greet Jayasuriya into the attack by hoisting him for six over long-on and expanding his repertoire. Not all the runs came off the middle of the bat, but they all counted towards the total that was getting ever closer to the target.Sri Lanka needed wickets and brought Vaas back. He continued to pose a threat to the batsmen but failed to make the breakthrough and the other bowlers lacked the penetration or accuracy to maintain the pressure that might lead to a mistake.When that mistake eventually came, it was too late to affect the outcome of the match. Yuvraj sliced a Fernando full-toss to Chandana at backward point after the fifth wicket partnership had realised 91 runs in 20 overs.Dravid went on to his fifty from 82 balls with a six and four fours and appeared destined to be there at the end when the victory he had worked so hard to earn was achieved. He would have been had a direct throw from Fernando not run him out when just nine runs were required, but he had done enough to earn the man of the match award and could watch as Chandana bowled a wide with the scores level to end the game. It was the 13th wide bowled by Sri Lanka along with five no balls and it does not take an acute cricketing brain to work out that such generosity to the opposition does not make it easy to defend a small total.

    West Indies announce team for final one-day games

    Opening batsman Chris Gayle, along with bowlers Mervyn Dillon and Neil McGarrell have been omitted from the West Indies team for the sixth Cable & Wireless One-Day International at Queen’s Park Oval in Trinidad tomorrow.The West Indies XI is as follows: Carl Hooper (captain), Daren Ganga, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Brian Lara, Ricardo Powell, Marlon Samuels, Ridley Jacobs, Cameron Cuffy, Kerry Jeremy, Dinanath Ramnarine and Corey Collymore.The West Indies, who have already lost the series will retain the same squad for the final Cable & Wireless One-Day International inSt. Vincent next Wednesday (May 16)

    Anoop Pai, Srinivas Rao prop up South Zone

    A fourth wicket stand of 130 runs between I Srinivas Rao (89) and skipperAnoop Pai (80) helped South Zone end the first day at 255 for seven in theVijay Hazare Trophy (under-16) quarterfinal match against Central Zone atthe Maharaja Jayachamaraja Wodayar Sports Centre in Bangalore on Wednesday.South Zone started off on the wrong foot after they opted to bat. OpenerDinesh Kartik (7) was caught behind by Ali Akbar off Devendra Singh off thefirst ball of the fifth over. His partner Prasanth Peter (7) hung aroundtill the 12th over when he was bowled by Vivek Yadav. This brought SrinivasRao and Anoop Pai together. They took their time to settle down and thenset about rebuilding the innings. Before long both notched up halfcenturies, with Srinivas getting to the mark first.The partnership was broken when Srinivas was dismissed caught by TahirAbbas off Shivakanth Shukla in the 54th over. During a 203-minute stay inthe middle, Srinivas faced 147 balls and hit 15 boundaries. Then with thescore on 195, new batsman Srivasudeva Das also departed caught by Shuklaoff Rahat Ali. Anoop was finally out in the 78th over of the day when hewas caught by Tahir off Praveen Gupta. Anoop had batted a shade over fourhours, during which he faced 209 balls and found the boundary ropes eleventimes.Central Zone claimed the new ball after 83 overs and in the last stages ofthe day’s play Abhinav was trapped leg before by Devendra Singh. Two oversbefore the scheduled close of play, new batsman Manjunath also departed ina similar manner, the bowler this time being Vivek Yadav. I Varun (17) andS Yadav (9) were at the crease at stumps. The wickets were shared allaround with new ball bowlers Devendra Singh (2 for 55) and Vivek Yadav (2for 30) being the pick.

    All expectations for a grand finale at Sharjah

    Pakistan and Sri Lanka meet in the ARY Gold Cup Final at Sharjah today. On current form Pakistan are playing like champions, having won all their four double league matches. On the other hand Sri Lanka were fortunate to enter the final after narrowly edged out the Black Caps on a better run rate of -0.08 against -0.99. However, the two teams had won one match against each other in the competition. Nevertheless one-day final matches, for that matter in any contest, are just one match and any team performing well on the day may excel and win. Both the teams have an excellent track record. Yet it is note worthy that Pakistan has a distinct supremacy over their rivals on the basis of overall results. Out of the 86 ODI’s played between the two teams, Pakistan has won 54 matches against 29 victories by the Sri Lankans, of the remaining, one match ended in a tie and the other two in no-result.Analysis of recent performances:
    Further analysis of their recent performance against each other in 2000-2001 reveals that, Pakistan maintains dominance by winning five of the last seven matches played from June 2000 to date. Pakistan convincingly beat Sri Lanka in two matches, including the final of the ‘Asia Cup’ at Dhaka in June 2000. Only four weeks later fate reversed and Sri Lanka beat Pakistan in both matches of the Singer triangular series during Pakistan’s last tour of the Pearl Island, South Africa was the third participant.In the last encounter last year at Gymkhana Club Ground Nairobi, Pakistan humbled Sri Lanka in the 2nd quarterfinal of the ICC Knock Out Trophy by 9 wickets on October 8, 2000. This was one of their biggest victories against the 1996 World Cup champions.Performance in current tournament:
    In the current tournament Pakistan beat Sri Lanka in the two league matches by 16 and 28 runs respectively. Both Inzamam-ul-Haq and Saeed Anwar have so far consistently performed with supreme confidence. Waqar Younis, Saqlain Mushtaq, Abdur Razzaq, and Shahid Afridi have ably handled the Pakistan bowling. On the other hand, Sri Lankan performance in the tournament has been credited by excellent centuries by skipper Sanath Jayasuriya and Mahela Jayawardene in the first match against the Kiwis and also Muralitharan was unplayable with 3 for 12 off 7.1 overs on the day. He can be unplayable and magical at any time. R Kaluwitharana and Russel Arnold are the other two dangerous batsmen. D Fernando, Chaminda Vaas and Zoysa with Muralitharan form a formidable Sri Lankan attack.No doubt Pakistan stand a good chance in the Sharjah Final but it may be the Sri Lanka has saved their best performance for the final. Hopefully a very tough, exciting and competitive contest will be played for the coveted title.
    Summery ODI’s Pakistan V/s Sri Lanka 2000-01 (To Date)

    Tournament Played Pakistan Won Sri Lanka Won Tied NR
    Asia Cup 2000 2 2 0 0 0
    Singer Trophy 2 0 2 0 0
    ICC Knock Out 1 1 0 0 0
    ARY Gold Cup Series 2 2 0 0 0
    Total 7 5 2 0 0

    Cosgrove blasts Tasmania to victory


    ScorecardMark Cosgrove has enjoyed his move to Tasmania•Warren Keir – SMP Images

    Mark Cosgrove demolished Western Australia for the second time in the match to drive Tasmania to a comfortable ten-wicket win on the third morning at Bellerive Oval. Set 106 for victory, the Tigers got there with ease, as Cosgrove blasted an unbeaten 86 from 53 deliveries, with his opening partner Ed Cowan on 18 when the winning runs arrived.It continued Cosgrove’s strong form after he made 100 in the first innings and since being axed by South Australia and given a lifeline by Tasmania, he has made 510 Sheffield Shield runs at 56.66. However, Cosgrove was lucky to be there at the end, having been dropped on 74 when he drove Michael Beer to Shaun Marsh at long-on.The day began with the Warriors 76 runs in front with six wickets in hand, but a horrible collapse meant a tiny chase for the Tigers. Luke Butterworth ran out Adam Voges for 38 and then helped to run through the Western Australia lower order with 4 for 59, as the Warriors could only get 20 runs from their last six batsmen.Adding to their problems, the in-form fast bowler Ryan Duffield is expected to miss six weeks with a stress fracture in his back. The Big Bash runs through January and the Warriors don’t have another Sheffield Shield outing until February 10, and the coach Mickey Arthur said with his side sitting on the bottom of the table, major changes were expected to the squad.”I think we’re going to have to sit down now and make some serious decisions about where we want to go with the squad,” Arthur told AAP. “There’s no beating around that bush. We’re clearly not able to challenge for Shield positions with the squad we’ve got.”

    West Indies retain Permaul, Powell for ODIs

    West Indies have retained left-arm spinner Veerasammy Permaul and opener Kieran Powell for the limited-overs series against Bangladesh, starting November 30. Permaul made his Test debut in the opening game of the two-Test series against Bangladesh in Mirpur and picked up four wickets. He is yet to play an international limited-overs game. Powell made a century in each innings of the Mirpur Test, which West Indies won by 77 runs.Kemar Roach, who is not playing the Tests due to a knee injury, was passed fit for the five ODIs and one Twenty20 international on this tour.Six players from the current Test squad will be returning home. They are: Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Narsingh Deonarine, Fidel Edwards, Kirk Edwards, Assad Fudadin and Denesh Ramdin. Allrounder Dwayne Bravo missed out again, having failed to recover from a thigh strain that had ruled him out of the Champions League T20 in October. There was no place for opener Johnson Charles, who played the ODI series at home against New Zealand.Kieron Pollard takes over as vice-captain in Bravo’s absence. In addition to Pollard and Roach, allrounders Andre Russell and Dwayne Smith, wicketkeeper Devon Thomas and opener Lendl Simmons will join the one-day squad.West Indies squad: Darren Sammy (capt), Kieron Pollard (vc), Tino Best, Darren Bravo, Chris Gayle, Sunil Narine, Veerasammy Permaul, Kieran Powell, Ravi Rampaul, Kemar Roach, Andre Russell, Marlon Samuels, Lendl Simmons, Dwayne Smith, Devon Thomas (wk).