Bulls' last-wicket pair hold on to force a draw

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Jimmy Maher produced a fine 73 as Queensland held on for a tense draw at Sydney© Getty Images

Queensland’s last-wicket pair of Nathan Hauritz and Joe Dawes hung on for 43 minutes to deny New South Wales an outright victory at Bankstown Oval in Sydney. Set an unrealistic 426 to win, the final pair joined at 9 for 156 and survived 69 balls to claim a gripping draw.Stuart MacGill set up the the thrilling conclusion with 4 for 12 in 16 balls, but no bowler could get the final wicket, although Hauritz stood his ground to a huge appeal for a catch to Phil Jaques, the close-in fielder. “Not to get the six points is disappointing,” Brad Haddin, the captain who did not enforce the follow-on when leading by 207, said. “We had 12 overs to get those last two out and you’d back yourself nine times out of 10. We had 70 overs to bowl them out so I don’t think I would have changed anything.”Jimmy Maher, who top-scored with 73, was “baffled” when the Bulls weren’t made to follow-on and praised the “never-say-die attitude” of Dawes (8 from 29 balls) and Hauritz (6 from 44). “Great character was shown by Dawes and Hauritz and the true Queensland fighting spirit came through,” said Maher.Haddin’s lunch-time declaration came after his unbeaten 80 from 73 balls and Ed Cowan’s 66. New South Wales claimed first-innings points yesterday to join Queensland on 28, two behind Western Australia, but the Blues are ahead on quotient.

T&T honours the legacy of the three W's

Frank Worell, Clyde Walcott and Everton Weekes © The Cricketer International
 

The debut of the Three Ws-Sir Frank Worrell, Clyde Walcott and Sir Everton Weekes – some 60 years ago changed the face of West Indies cricket forever. That history was celebrated on Tuesday night at the Queen’s Park Oval Banquet Hall in the presence of the last surviving member, Sir Everton Weekes.Worrell made his Test debut in 1948, at the Oval, against England. The match marked the start of the Three Ws era, and was also Andy Ganteaume’s lone Test appearance. Though the Trinidad and Tobago batsman made 112, he was never again selected on the regional team.Three perspectives on the life of Worrell and the 1948 Test match were presented at Tuesday’s function. Deryck Murray gave a player’s take on Worrell, Tony Cozier delivered a journalist’s point of view and Professor Courtney Bartholomew presented a personal perspective.All three speakers agreed that his contribution to West Indies cricket went “well beyond the boundary”.Murray described the 1948 Test as unique since it was Ganteaume’s first and last appearance. He said Ganteaume’s unfortunate situation will remain one of the defining moments of the era. Murray praised Ganteaume for the way he carried himself after being dropped after becoming the first West Indies batsman to make a century on debut, in the first innings of the Oval Test. The T&T board president said Ganteaume was “still able to contribute, and further the cause of West Indies cricket.”Murray recalled the first time he played under the captaincy of Worrell. “In Sir Frank Worrell we had a man who became accepted as the elder statesman of West Indies cricket…a unifying force. He was all things to all men. I understood how little the significance of insularity could be if you wanted to be part of a team. He insisted that room-mates could not be from the same territory, he insisted that there was an older and younger roommate so that at all times the team administration was about learning, mentorship and becoming a representative of a truly West Indian team in the true sense of the word. I have no hesitation in saying that Sir Frank Worrell was the greatest leader that world cricket has ever seen and probably even beyond that.”Cozier looked back at Worrell’s career. “Here is a man who, through cricket and from quite humble beginnings in Barbados, was knighted in 1964, the second West Indian cricketer to be knighted, was a senator in Jamaica, and when he died he was honoured by a Memorial Service in Westminster Abbey, the only cricketer to be so honoured.”It was here at the Queen’s Park Oval,” Cozier continued, “a 17-year-old school boy, batting No. 11 and considered a left-arm spin bowler, came onto the scene playing for Barbados. He moved up the order, and in 1946 he and Walcott put on an unbeaten partnership of 574 of which Worrell had 255 not out and Walcott 314 not out. “Sir Everton Weekes,” Cozier noted, “was out for a duck, but he more than made up for it in subsequent innings at the Oval.”

The bust of Sir Frank Worrell overlooks the 3Ws Oval in Barbados © Tigercricket.com
 

In the feature address, Bartholomew was high in praise for the Three Ws. “It was all for one and one for all,” he declared, noting that when Weekes was out for a duck at the Oval, Worrell and Walcott made up for it. It is a good thing that God made night or else Worrell and Walcott would still be at the crease.”Bartholomew also spoke about Worrell’s captaincy on the tour of Australia in 1960-61. At the end of the tour there was a ticker-tape farewell for the team, with 200,000 people lining the streets of Melbourne chanting “We want Frank”. West Indies lost the series 2-1 but featured in the first-ever tied Test. “We won the hearts of everyone in Australia and indeed the world.”In 1963, West Indies toured England and were again very popular. On that occasion, West Indies won the series 3-1. Worrell retired after the series, and died in 1967.The day before he died, Bartholomew recalled, Worrell told the nurses, “‘Please remove the drips … I am tired, very tired’. And so, the captain declared his innings retired hurt, before he reached his half-century, at the age of 42. The king is dead, long live the king. It was the worst of times.” Bartholomew thanked the Sir Frank Worrell Memorial Committee for keeping the “memory of the King alive … it was the best of times.” Weekes and Ganteaume were presented with memorial plaques.

Taibu hopes for a better showing

Tatenda Taibu: vowing to bounce back© Getty Images

When the itinerary was drawn up for Zimbabwe’s two-Test tour of South Africa, there had originally been just a two-day gap scheduled between last week’s Cape Town Test and the Centurion match, which gets underway tomorrow morning (Friday). But, thanks to South Africa’s ludicrously facile two-day victory at Newlands, the two sides have been given the best part of a week to prepare for the rematch, or rather, the mismatch Part Two.There really isn’t a lot that can be said about this fixture. Amid the outrage that greeted the result of the first Test, in which South Africa bowled Zimbabwe out for 54 before romping to 340 for 3 by the close of the first day, there were renewed calls for Zimbabwe’s Test status to be reviewed, and not even the return of their former captain, Heath Streak, was able to increase the team’s competitiveness.Nobody in their right mind expects Zimbabwe to bounce back from such a humiliation, least of all the CEO of the Nashua Titans franchise, Elise Lombard, who warned last week that another two-day finish could cost the Centurion authorities a small fortune in lost revenue. But Zimbabwe can at least console themselves that things surely cannot get any worse.Their captain, Tatenda Taibu, remained defiant however, arguing that his team had learned a great deal from their Newlands humiliation. “We learnt how important it was to bat for long periods and we also learnt that there is no margin for error on the South African grounds,” Taibu told the SAPA news agency. “We’ve all learnt a lot and we need to go back and put what we’ve learnt into practice.”The only bright spot for Zimbabwe came on the second day, when, with South Africa’s intensity understandably reduced, they kept the match alive until after tea, thanks in particular to a storming innings from the returning Andy Blignaut, who cracked 61 from 58 balls, including six sixes.

Dion Ebrahim: a rare bright spot in the second innings© Getty Images

“The boys weren’t destroyed by the loss because we fought back well,” said Taibu, adding that the likes of Blignaut and Streak were not yet match-fit after spending a long time on the sidelines during their dispute with the Zimbabwe Cricket Union.With a major tour of the Caribbean looming at the end of the month, South Africa have chosen to rest their established new-ball pairing of Makhaya Ntini – who hasn’t missed a game for 36 matches and three years – and Shaun Pollock, who has a long-term ankle injury. But South Africa’s captain, Graeme Smith, warned Zimbabwe that there would be no let-up at Centurion.”It would be difficult to re-enact the two-day Test,” Smith told SAPA, “but certainly we’ll be playing with the same intensity, the will to win and the will to be ruthless that we had at Newlands.” Into Pollock and Ntini’s places come Monde Zondeki and Andre Nel, and Smith expects great things of the pair.”They are all different kinds of bowlers with their own special talents,” he said of his attack, which also includes Charl Langeveldt, who ripped through England in the Cape Town Test in January. “Nella’s big and strong, and he gets good pace and bounce, and he gets good shape. We want to see him bowl the way we know he can.”I want to see Monde run in, get pace, hit good areas and create chances,” added Smith. “Although Langes doesn’t have the same pace, he is a guy that gets good swing. We want to see them work together as a trio and build the pressure. That’s what our four seam bowlers did for us in Cape Town.”South Africa 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 AB de Villiers, 3 Jacques Rudolph, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 Herschelle Gibbs, 6 Ashwell Prince, 7 Mark Boucher (wk), 8 Nicky Boje, 9 Monde Zondeki, 10 Charl Langeveldt, 11 Andre Nel.Zimbabwe (from) Stuart Matsikenyeri, Barney Rogers, Hamilton Masakadza, Dion Ebrahim, Sean Williams, Tatenda Taibu (capt and wk), Alester Maregwede, Heath Streak, Andy Blignaut, Elton Chigumbura, Graeme Cremer, Prosper Utseya, Twanda Mupariwa, Christopher Mpofu, Douglas Hondo.

Bond's comeback no help for Canterbury

Shane Bond’s comeback from an abdominal muscle strain, amid speculation he has signed with the Indian Cricket League, could not help his side Canterbury in their Twenty20 loss to Central Districts in Christchurch. Bond took 0 for 38 from his four overs as Central Districts cruised to 186 for 6, with Ross Taylor smashing five sixes in his 19-ball 46. Chris Harris, who is used to the Twenty20 format after joining the ICL, made 47 in the chase but had little support as Brendon Diamanti collected 3 for 14. Canterbury were all out for 120 in the 18th over, crashing to a 66-run loss.The Northern Districts captain James Marshall posted an unbeaten 58 to help his side to victory over Wellington in Hamilton. Marshall guided Northern Districts to 133 for 3 in the 16th over as they overhauled Wellington’s 131 for 8 with little drama. Grant Elliott top scored for the visitors with 34 but regular wickets meant they could not gather significant momentum.Bradley Scott helped Otago secure a 60-run win in Dunedin, grabbing 3 for 9 as Auckland were rattled out for 94. Rob Nicol tried to guide Auckland’s chase and made 43 but his team-mates fell apart and could get nowhere near Otago’s 154 for 7. Nathan McCullum’s 38 from 20 balls was the best individual effort for Otago.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Central Dist 1 1 0 0 0 4 +3.300 186/20.0 120/20.0
Otago 1 1 0 0 0 4 +3.000 154/20.0 94/20.0
Northern Dis 1 1 0 0 0 4 +2.031 133/15.3 131/20.0
Wellington 1 0 1 0 0 0 -2.031 131/20.0 133/15.3
Auckland 1 0 1 0 0 0 -3.000 94/20.0 154/20.0
Canterbury 1 0 1 0 0 0 -3.300 120/20.0 186/20.0

Hussey named vice-captain for Twenty20 international

Damien Martyn returns to the Australian set-up after impressing with Western Australia © Getty Images

Australia’s big three of Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee and Adam Gilchrist have been rested from the Twenty20 international against South Africa at the Gabba on Monday. Damien Martyn has won a national recall after breaking his finger and missing the Chappell-Hadlee Series while Mike Hussey, who has been a fixture for only a year, was named vice-captain.Trevor Hohns, the chairman of selectors, said he tried to keep the core of the one-day squad together but McGrath, Lee and Gilchrist needed to “freshen up” before the VB Series. McGrath was rested for the tour of New Zealand last month but Gilchrist was forced to tour despite being given time off by the selectors. “Brett, Glenn and Adam have worked particularly hard during the Melbourne and Sydney Tests,” Hohns said, “and we want to manage each of their respective workloads carefully.”Hussey has been a revelation in both Tests and limited-overs matches in the past year and Hohns said the appointment was “a feather in his cap”. “He has done an excellent job in the one-day format,” Hohns said, “and we have every confidence that he has the necessary ingredients to take on this additional responsibility.”Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Bracken, Mick Lewis and Stuart Clark, who formed the fast-bowling attack that was thrashed for a world-record chase by New Zealand in the third Chappell-Hadlee Series match, have been retained. The match against South Africa is the first international Twenty20 game in Australia.Australia Simon Katich, Michael Hussey, Ricky Ponting (capt), Damien Martyn, Andrew Symonds, Michael Clarke, James Hopes, Brad Haddin (wk), Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark, Mick Lewis, Mitchell Johnson.

Windies waltz as South Africa stumble

West Indies 218 for 3 (Johnson 83) beat South Africa 213 (Daneel 90) by seven wickets
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West Indies opening bowler Kemar Roach in action © ICC

West Indies secured their spot in the Super League as Leon Johnson, the captain, and Jason Mohammad struck stylish half-centuries with some of the more impressive batting in the tournament to date. Their stand of 148 enabled West Indies to overcome a rocky start, after South Africa had scraped their way to 213 on the back of Pieter Daneel’s defiant 90.South Africa’s total was short of par, but not as light as West Indies made it appear by cantering home with almost seven overs to spare. Chris Alexander’s mixed-bag of an opening over produced an inside-edge for four, a top-edge for six and the wicket of William Jenkins. When Wayne Parnell trapped Andre Fletcher lbw, leaving West Indies on 17 for 2 in the fourth over, it was certainly game on.However, South Africa’s bowling attack does not have much depth – as was harshly exposed when Australia racked up 316 on the opening day of the tournament – and once the new ball was negotiated Johnson and Mohammad began to increase the tempo. Dean Elgar followed the tried-and-tested method of introducing spin early, but there was no pressure on the batsmen to attempt anything outrageous. South Africa did have a chance to remove Johnson on 49 but Craig Kieswetter fluffed the chance behind the stumps.Elgar gambled and saved up his second Powerplay for later in the innings, but when he took it Johnson and Mohammad unleashed a calculated assault to speed their side towards victory. Both batsmen flicked effortless fours through the leg side, while Mohammad also peppered the straight boundaries with some powerful drives. That Caribbean flourish certainly lives on in this team.Johnson, fresh from his 83, hailed his side’s allround display: “We felt under pressure coming into the game. We did well to restrict them to 213, they have a good batting line-up. It was a good track and then we just applied ourselves well at the crease. We’ve been working very hard on our batting because in some of our preparation it perhaps wasn’t that good, but that hard work is paying off.”South Africa struggled to find the boundaries and apart from the nine struck between the openers, Symes and Daneel, they managed just five fours and a six. A torrential tropical downpour struck Colombo yesterday evening, resulting in a 30-minute delay to the start, and the damp outfield meant batting targets needed to be revised downwards.South Africa, though, had been given a sound start with a stand of 64 in 14 overs. West Indies were sharp in the field, with Gajanand Singh holding a stunning catch on the deep square-leg boundary to remove Levi at a vital time. The total was a healthy 109 for 1 before Singh flung himself parallel to the ground, holding the catch one-handed. Three overs later it was 115 for 4 and the innings needed some serious stabilising.Daneel’s innings was a fine example of concentration and application as he held the order together. He also had to overcome a serious bout of cramp, which resulted in him collapsing in pain after completing a quick single. After some rapid treatment from the physio he was able to continue with a runner but struggled to find the boundary.Following the match Elgar said: “Maybe he should have asked for a runner earlier, then we might have got an extra 30 runs, but I’m not blaming him, it is the rest of the batsmen.”Elgar knows South Africa haven’t performed well so far, as they now head into the Plate tournament, and added: “We don’t want to be losing to the lower teams, because then we really will be going home with our tails between our legs.” Johnson, however, summed it up in a typically West Indian way when asked about the quarter-final against India: “We just have to go and play cricket, and the rest will happen.”

Hamilton powers Central Districts to title

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Matthew Sinclair and Min Patel celebrate Central Districts’ championship victory at Wellington © Getty Images

Powered by a six-wicket haul by Lance Hamilton, Central Districts ended the domestic season in style claiming the State Championship title, defeating Wellington, the home side, by 113 runs at the Basin Reserve.Following a delayed start due to rain, Hamilton, the left-arm quick, engineered a dramatic batting collapse as Wellington crashed to 120 all out. It enabled Central Districts to surge to their maiden championship title, since it’s inception in 2001-02.Both sides came into the fifth day with honours even, but Wellington paid the price for not putting together useful partnerships as Hamilton ripped through the middle order. Neal Parlane was the first to be dismissed after a dogged 8 off 52 balls, bowled by Hamilton and he quickly accounted for Grant Elliot and Chris Nevin, caught behind by Bevan Griggs.Michael Parlane and Stu Mills stabilised the innings for a while, stringing together a partnership of 33 for the seventh wicket, but Parlane’s dismissal squandered all hopes of Wellington staging a miraculous comeback. Griggs too rounded up a good day, taking his fourth catch of the innings following Parlane’s dismissal. Michael Mason sent back Mills and Scott Rasmussen and Hamilton struck the final blow, dismissing Dewayne Bowden to finish with figures of 6 for 34.

Kamini looks to bamboozle the English

Charlotte Edwards is not complacent: ‘Women’s cricket is really looking good today. All the top four teams are very strong and on a day each can beat the other’ © Getty Images

Thirush Kamini is a commerce student at the Church Park school near Thousand Lights mosque in Chennai. She is a good student, a very good one, she avers, and has no problem coping with the pressure of balancing studies with, get this, playing international cricket.Part of India’s squad for the quadrangular tournament, Kamini, 16, is a legbreak bowler who debuted for India at the Asia Cup last December and won the player-of-the-tournament award for her eight wickets at 10.87 apiece. She has certainly got the support of her captain, Mithali Raj, who was sure that in Kamini India had a star-in-the-making.At nets, on the eve of India’s opening match against England, she bowled with a round-arm action and tried to the flight the ball pitching it right up to the crease. She had tripped over a practice ball the day before but, typically, dismissed it as nothing serious. Kamini began playing cricket with her father when she was nine years old but soon moved to the Sports and Development Authority of Tamil Nadu for some professional coaching. Playing with boys, for a while, she kept wickets. But by 2002, Kamini had decided that leg spin was the way to go. Though Shane Warne does not feature among her cricketing heroes – she likes Sachin Tendulkar and Karen Rolton – she will hope to get some of his magic when she comes in to bowl at Charlotte Edwards, Claire Taylor, Ebony-Rainford Brent and the other England batsmen.India’s net session went on for three hours with all members of the squad going through the batting and fielding drills before heading off to the swimming pool. England, on the other hand, had a light session late afternoon resting five players from the squad. Edwards, the England captain, said that the side had had two rigorous matches against India A and India B in the last two days so the nets session had been optional. A dilemma that the captain is facing is who should keep wickets in the game against India. Along with Jane Smit, the regular keeper, England have brought Sarah Taylor, a 17-year old wicketkeeper, who has averaged 50.50 in the five matches she has played for England.Asked which team will be the toughest opposition, Edwards said that India, being at home, and Australia, in their current form, are the favourites. “Women’s cricket is really looking good today. All the top four teams are very strong and on a day each can beat the other.”Australia play New Zealand on February 21 at the ITT Chemplast stadium while India take on England at Chepauk.

Hayden, Langer and rain dominate a stop-start day

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How they were out

Justin Langer and Matthew Hayden: both made hundreds as Australia pressed ahead © Getty Images

Matthew Hayden ended the biggest drought of his career with a courageous century, and Justin Langer completed a hundred of his own as well, as Australia’s batsmen continued to pile on the pressure in their last-ditch attempt to snatch the Ashes from England’s grasp. But, for the second day running, the issue was not so much the runs compiled but the time lost to rain and bad light. By the end of a stop-start day in which just 45.4 overs were possible, Australia closed on 277 for 2, still 96 runs adrift of England’s first-innings 373.For the second day running, play ended in unexpected fashion, as Australia’s batsmen took an offer for bad light with 5.2 overs still remaining. The subtext was clear. Australia intend to build as big a first innings as possible, and unleash Shane Warne on the final day with eight men round the bat and the entire hopes of a country crushing down on the England batsmen’s shoulders.The day may have been dominated by rain, but it belonged unequivocally to Hayden. After a half-hour delay that set the benchmark for the day’s proceedings, he resumed his innings on 32 not out, a performance that had been perhaps the most tortuous of his 71-Test career. By lunch, however, he was growing in confidence on 60 not out, his bullying instincts reawakened by a crunching pull off Steve Harmison’s first delivery of the day, and a flogged drive for four off Matthew Hoggard. Tellingly, he had acknowledged neither the crowd nor his team-mates upon reaching his first half-century of the series, and his hundred duly arrived from 218 balls, with a trademark straight drive off Andrew Flintoff.

Rain was a constant annoyance to both players and another capacity crowd © Getty Images

Though the scoreline would not suggest it, England’s bowlers remained disciplined and stuck to their guns on a pitch that has remained true throughout. Revelling in the overcast conditions, Hoggard was the pick of England’s bowlers in the morning. He should have struck with his first ball of the morning, but umpire Billy Bowden turned down an excruciating lbw appeal with Langer on 75. While Hoggard was probing away, Australia were never able to settle.Chaotic calling nearly resulted in a run-out as Langer found himself nose-to-nose with his partner at the same end of the pitch, while Hayden also survived a tight lbw call off Hoggard on 41. But slowly but surely, Australia manoeuvred themselves towards a position of potency, with Langer finally securing the hundred that his tenacious batting has deserved all summer, with a steer for four through third man off Harmison.Langer’s innings, however, wouldn’t last much longer than that. Only 34 balls were possible in a brief flurry after lunch, but in that time, Harmison rediscovered the rhythm and raucous lift that has eluded him for much of this series. Langer fenced a searing lifter over the slips for four to bring up 7000 Test runs, but in the same over he was gone, bowled off the inside-edge for a gutsy and brilliant 105.That proved to be the last act of the session. A violent cloudburst drenched the covers and led to a two-hour rain delay, but upon the resumption, Harmison was straight back into his zone, troubling Ricky Ponting with his extra lift and venom, before cramping Hayden with a tight line across his pads. Though he did not add to his wickets tally, he demonstrated that England’s resolve would not be buckled, in spite of the mounting tension.

A rare success for England as Steve Harmison bowls Langer for 105 © Getty Images

In previous games, the time would have been ripe for a spell from Simon Jones at the other end, but instead Ashley Giles came on to apply a stranglehold and allow Flintoff to rest up for a burst of his own, as England realised that restricting the runs was of equal importance to wickets. Even so, Giles could have dismissed Ponting for 13, but Bowden this time failed to spot a faint inside-edge on a bat-pad opportunity.Sure enough, when Flintoff’s spell arrived he did not disappoint. With an hour of play remaining, Ponting hadn’t banked on Flintoff getting so much bounce from a ball that was now 72 overs old, and jerked his head back in surprise to Flintoff’s second delivery, for a diving Andrew Strauss to hold onto a fine catch in the gully. Australia’s quest for parity by the close had suffered a big setback, and as a pumped-up Flintoff tormented Damien Martyn’s outside edge, they opted to baton down the hatches, and come out fighting on the fourth day instead.By rights, Australia should be waltzing to victory in this game, and with almost 200 overs still remaining in the match, there is plenty time yet for them to turn the screw some more. But with more unsettled weather in the offing for tomorrow, the players appear to be bracing themselves for the fourth consecutive nerve-jangler of an unforgettable summer. Hayden, unbeaten on 110 at the close, epitomised an Australian team that had regained its composure and confidence. England – and the elements – have their work cut out over the next two days.

AustraliaJustin Langer b Harmison 105 (185 for 1)
Cramped for room, bowled off inside-edgeRicky Ponting c Strauss b Flintoff 35 (264 for 2)
Surprised by extra bounce, sliced push to gully

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