The Quotes Log – Apr. 1 – Apr. 7

Saturday, April 5, 2003:::
“There was a lot of euphoria for the way we played during the tournament and a lot of people (in the Government) are proud the way we played. We received a rousing welcome when we got back to Nairobi.” Kenyan captain Steve Tikolo
Source: The Gulf News, United Arab Emirates”I would be interested in having a chat. Whether I am interested [in the job] would depend on that chat. Coaching New Zealand would be my main ambition but any team that plays one-day internationals and Test matches would appeal to me.” John Bracewell, on being approached by Sri Lanka for the position of coach
Source: The Guardian, UK”I would rather look at someone like Sandeep Patil, who has done a wonderful job with Kenya. I don’t want to discuss the merits of a foreign coach but I know we too have the people to do the job.” Former Indian star Kapil Dev, on the issue of a foreign coach for India
Source: The Hindu, India”[It is] more daunting than trying to hit a first-ball six.” Indian captain Sourav Ganguly to West Bengal chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, on the prospect of making a speech in Bengali
Source: The Times of India, IndiaTuesday, April 1, 2003:::
“We are a very forgiving people. We feel that if the selectors recommend any player once, twice or three times, we should look at it,” West Indies Cricket Board president Rev. Wes Hall, on the appointment of Brian Lara as the new captain
Source: Ananova, UK
“We are the benchmark for other teams to aspire to, due largely to a thing called professionalism, which is what we all pride ourselves on,” Australia Test captain Steve Waugh
Source: BBC, UK
“Lara is a great player and he will no doubt fire up against Australia. He particularly likes facing Glenn McGrath. He likes to perform on the big stage, and playing Australia is as big as it gets for him,” Steve Waugh
Source: The Age, Australia
“I always thought that a batsman’s best years are between 28 and 36. At 30 I was looking forwards to the best years of my international career. But the selectors forced my hand and that was obviously not ideal for me,” Alistair Campbell, announcing his retirement
Source: Rediff.com

White and Wood take Yorkshire within sight of CricInfo Championship

Craig White and Matthew Wood both thrashed centuries as Yorkshire enjoyed a run bonanza against Glamorgan at the Scarborough Cricket Festival today.Yorkshire finished the second day strongly placed on 433 for five, their first innings lead over Glamorgan being worth 210.In an early celebration of clinching the CricInfo Championship title – now a mere formality – White and Wood piled up 243 in 63 overs for the second wicket.Wood, who rejoined White at the crease in the first over of the day after retiring hurt last night, cracked 124 off 240 balls with 18 fours and two sixes before falling lbw to left-arm spinner Dean Cosker.But White continued to plunder runs off the Glamorgan attack and he was in sight of a maiden double century when his off stump was removed by Darren Thomas for 183 which included 25 fours and two sixes and was made off 273 deliveries.It was Wood’s fourth century of the season while White was left just three runs sort of equalling his career-best score which he set up a fortnight ago in the Roses match at Old Trafford.The 6,000 crowd were expecting some early fireworks from Darren Lehmann when the Australian came in at 353 for three but after making only a single he launched himself into a big drive and lobbed back a catch to Cosker during the spinner’s marathon spell.Michael Vaughan made an elegant 45 before chopping Steve Watkin into his stumps but Anthony McGrath and captain David Byas settled in together to cause Glamorgan more grief.A big cheer went up when Byas pulled Simon Jones for the boundary which took Yorkshire to 400 and secured maximum bonus points – so guaranteeing them the title if they go on to win the match – and Byas celebrated the moment by hooking the next ball for six.McGrath was unbeaten on 29 and Byas 31 at the close, the sixth wicket pair having put on 59 together.Wood said later: “I had six stitches put into my cheek after being hit but it could have been a lot worse and I just wanted to get back in the middle. Once I had struck that early six I felt much better and really enjoyed my partnership with Craig.”

Mumbai qualify for Wills Trophy

Mumbai qualified for the Wills Trophy from the West Zone on Wednesdayby topping the table with the maximum eight points from their fourgames. In their last league encounter of the Ranji Trophy one daytournament, they registered a nine wicket victory over Baroda at theMotibaug ground in Baroda.Jacob Martin and Sameer Dighe, skippers of Baroda and Mumbai strolledout for a crucial toss as both Baroda and Mumbai were unbeaten intheir matches so far.Dighe won the toss and decided to chase a target as they had done inall their matches this season. Santosh Saxena (3/39) pushed Baroda onthe backfoot scalping Connor Williams (5) and Daulat Thorat (9) inquick succession. Kiran Powar ran out keeper Milap Mewada who did notface a delivery. Baroda were tottering on 33 for three.Jacob Martin (66) and veteran Tushar Arothe (76) put on a rescue actwith a 105-run partnership for the fourth wicket. Santosh Saxena brokethe partnership having Martin caught by Vinod Kambli and it was alldownhill for Baroda from there on. They folded up for 203 in 47.1overs. Allrounder Robin Morris chipped in with three for 30.Mumbai openers Robin Morris (56) and Wasim Jaffer (116 not out)continued their good form with the bat putting up their secondconsecutive hundred run partnership for the first wicket. Robin kepthis good form scoring his third half century of the tournament.Wasim’s 98-ball innings had two towering sixes and 15 hits to thefence. Robin put up two sixes and six boundaries in his innings.Mumbai romped home in 29.2 overs scoring at a rate of seven runs anover.

Dippenaar calls for quota system shake-up

Boeta Dippenaar, the former South Africa batsman, has gone on the attack for change © Getty Images
 

Boeta Dippenaar has urged Cricket South Africa (CSA) to revamp its racial quota system and focus on cricket rather than politics. Dippenaar, the new president of the South African Cricketers’ Association, wants administrators to choose players on cricket ability rather than race.His comments come in the wake of Charl Langeveldt’s decision in March to withdraw from the tour squad for India in protest at Andre Nel’s omission because of CSA’s racial transformation policy. Dippenaar worries keen youngsters may be deterred from aiming for international honours because of the policy.”If people had an aspiration to play for South Africa they will now think twice about doing so,” Dippenaar told Reuters. “I have always said the game should be surrounded by people with cricketing interests at heart and not people with political interests at heart. There’s a distinct difference.”We are on dangerous ground as soon as we start saying ‘x’ amount of players have to be white and ‘x’ amount of players have to be of colour,” Dippenaar said. “We don’t mind if the whole team is black if that’s the best team. Throughout the whole transformation process a lot of patriotism has been lost.”Dippenaar pointed to the example of England’s Kevin Pietersen, who left South Africa partly because of his disagreement with their policy on quotas. “No country can afford to lose a player of Pietersen’s calibre,” said Dippenaar. “That puts a question mark about whether we are doing the right things. We should never have allowed a player of his calibre to fall through our net.”

Malinga joins Kent on short-term deal

Lasith Malinga: headed for Canterbury © Getty Images

Sri Lanka’s World Cup star, Lasith Malinga, has joined Kent on a short-termdeal. Malinga, 23, will join the county for three weeks as a replacementfor the South African all-rounder, Andrew Hall, who has international commitments.Malinga, who bowls with a unique slinging round-arm action, grabbed fourSouth Africa wickets in as many balls during a World Cup Super Eight matchin March.”I am delighted to get the opportunity and I consider the experience to bea great one,” said Malinga. “I will try to maximise every opportunity at Kent for the betterment of mygame.”This is the first time I have played any form of domestic cricket in anothercountry and I am looking forward to an enjoyable three weeks in the Kentdressing room.”Kent’s director of cricket, Graham Ford, confirmed the deal and an officialannouncement from the county is expected tomorrow. “He is a top performer,” said Ford. “Andrew Hall was called up to return to South Africa so obviously we needed a replacement.”

Row reported over Zimbabwe A-team selection

A row has broken out inside Zimbabwe Cricket after the announcement of the Zimbabwe A side to take on Bangladesh later this month. The argument is said to be between a top unnamed ZC official and Bruce Makovah, the controversial convener of selectors, over the composition of the team.ZC last week named a heavily-depleted A-team squad which included mostly players who have not played first-class cricket. The side was chosen mainly from the weakened ZC National League which ran this year after a number of top clubs withdrew. They ignored players from the splinter local league, which was formed by the rebel clubs which broke away from ZC over administrative differences. This was despite insistence by ZC that players playing outside its own structures would be considered.However, the bone of contention appears to be within the ZC circles. Sources told Cricinfo that ZC interim committee members and some club officials had confronted Makovah, alleging that he had been biased against some players whose deserved to be picked.For example, the two best players in the ZC’s own National League, Mbekezeli Mabuza and Daniel Soma, were not included. The same goes for the batsmen, where players with glaringly better averages were picked ahead of lesser-performing ones.Bangladesh A will soon arrive in Zimbabwe for a five week tour.

Interim administrator greeted by locked doors

The corridors of power remained closed to S Mohan © Mid-Day

When S Mohan, the former Supreme Court judge charged with the task of being the interim administrator in charge of the affairs of the Indian Board, arrived in Mumbai on Saturday morning, he was in for a rude shock. He proceeded to the office of the Board of Control for Cricket in India shortly before noon – and, after finally locating the office in Stadium House at the Cricket Club of India, was greeted by a big padlock.”Oh, the doors are locked,” he exclaimed to the few journalists gathered to see how the interim administrator would take charge of his duties. When one pressman asked him if he was shocked or surprised by the fact that the office was closed, he could only reply: “I feel sorry. My good wishes are with the team. If this is the way a former Supreme Court judge is treated, you can draw your own conclusions.”Mohan insisted that he had not planned to deal with the purely cricket affairs of the board. “I don’t intend to interfere with the cricketing part. I only meant to look into the administration,” he said. He added that he came to meet people concerned with the board office and explain the scope of the Madras high-court order. He was also going to inform the various state associations of his appointment as interim administrator.The Board’s office is usually open from 10am to 1pm on Saturdays, according to a notice outside the office. But apparently a high-ranking official ordered the office to remain closed, and declared two days’ leave late on Friday evening. Mohan may be unfamiliar with the workings of the board, but he is not a complete stranger to cricket – he played for the Triplicane Club in Chennai in the late 1940s as an offspinner.

Dawn of a brave new world

Western Province Boland 122 for 4 (Puttick 63*) beat Dolphins 121 for 6 by 6 wickets
ScorecardThe much-marketed Standard Bank PRO20 Series got underway in front of 10,035 spectators at Newlands as the new franchise system also kicked off with Nashua Western Province Boland playing host to Nashua Dolphins.A new concept in South African cricket, with each team set a maximum of 20 overs, saw Ashwell Prince winning the toss and asking the Dolphins to bat first. Doug Watson, after being bogged down, had the distinction of becoming the first player to lose his wicket in the Series, being caught by Graeme Smith off the bowling of Charl Willoughby. Disaster followed with Imran Khan and Dale Benkenstein falling off consecutive balls and then six balls later Hashim Amla followed also for 0. Shaun Pollock, batting up the order, was next to go, leaving the Dolphins 57 for 5 at the halfway mark.With Jon Kent losing his wicket, Lance Klusener joined Ahmed Amla and together they upped the scoring rate, accelerating to 121 for 6 at the end of the 20 overs. Klusener hammered 39 off 28 balls, including two fours and two sixes, while Amla added 30 off 37.Graeme Smith and Herschelle Gibbs opened the innings for Western Province Boland and both got first ballers from Pollock. Andrew Puttick and Neil Johnson got the innings back together taking the total to 56 after 10 overs before Klusener struck, getting rid of Johnson in the 11th.With Puttick going to his 50 off 46 balls and Prince riding his luck, they brought up a 50-run partnership in 37 balls, taking Province Boland to the brink of victory at 111 for 4 when Prince holed out to Khan. Puttick, winning the Master Blaster award, guided them to a six-wicket win.The match showed that the Dolphins have a lot to learn, with Klusener stuck at the crease after coming in too far down the order at No. 8 and Shaun Pollock only bowling three overs.

Agony for the also-rans as Super Six is completed


Rainruins the show
Photo Reuters

To England supporters, there is a peculiarly ghastly symmetry about the fact that the coup de grace to their World Cup aspirations has been delivered in Zimbabwe. Just as rain deprived South Africa of a critical two points at Kingsmead last night, so it intervened in Zimbabwe’s favour at Bulawayo today.Far from being in the Super Six, England have joined South Africa and the West Indies in the group that might be termed the “What If” Three. Three captains have known the misery of watching the weather intervene to their disadvantage – Carl Hooper at Benoni, where rain deprived West Indies of a certain win over Bangladesh, Nasser Hussain, who could probably hardly bear to think about, let alone watch, today’s watery scenes at Queens Sports Club, and of course Shaun Pollock last night.No true cricket lover who saw Pollock’s agonised expression as his team’s hopes drained away in the Durban drizzle will have drawn any pleasure from it. But the cold light of another day must remind him that in losing to both the West Indies and New Zealand – even though the latter match was also rain-affected – South Africa left themselves an awful lot to do.As has so often been said during this World Cup, you cannot expect to progress unless you beat the top teams. On that basis Sri Lanka and New Zealand deserved to go through, despite the solitary aberration of the former against Kenya, who have taken maximum advantage. The only significance of New Zealand’s decision not to go to Nairobi rests in the number of points the two sides take through.


ShaunPollock – agony
Photo Reuters

In Group A, the same applies to Australia, who beat everyone, and India, who beat everyone else. Pakistan, who lost to Australia, England and India, can hardly bewail their fate. England, to their credit, came closest to upsetting the favourites. If last Sunday’s result had fallen on the other edge of the knife, they would be through.Which brings us to the other “might have been” scenario for England, which is so glaring that it seems almost superfluous to highlight it. Well before the politicians got stuck in to the Zimbabwe match, it was plain that victory in Harare was England’s need as well as their expectation. Australia, India and Pakistan were their three toughest matches. Suffice to say that but for the forfeiture, England could have gone through despite being beaten in two of those three. Their exit is no disgrace.So we have a scenario that few would have put money on before the tournament. The primary hosts are out, while the two lesser hosts are both hanging in there against the odds. Not quite what the organisers had in mind – indeed rather the reverse – but there is nothing completely new about that. Remember what happened to the host nation in 1999?

Tikolo's heroics fail to prevent third West Indies' win

West Indies comfortably completed a 3-0 one-day series victory over Kenya with a seven-wicket win in the final game in Nairobi.But the result was harsh on Kenya’s Steve Tikolo who hit 71 and took two West Indies wickets.Tikolo is generally regarded as the finest Kenyan cricketer of all-time and showed just why with a dashing innings.But West Indies openers Leon Garrick and Chris Gayle put on 116 to set up victory. Gayle was eventually caught by David Otieno for a run-a-ball 70, while Garrick, in only his third One-Day International, dug in to make 76.Number three Wavell Hinds compiled a patient 44 not out, with Marlon Samuelsadding 30 before being dismissed only eight runs short of the victory target of 233.West Indies finished on 234 for three, easing to what had looked a testing target with 17 balls left.Tikolo’s 55-ball innings was the highlight of Kwenya’s effort as they made 232 for seven in their 50 overs. Tikolo made his debut 11 years ago and averages more than 30 in One-Day Internationals.Other major contributors in the Kenyan innings were openers David Otieno (34)and Ravindu Shah (29) who put on 74 for the first wicket, while Thomas Odoyuhit 31 and left-hander Hitesh Modi made an unbeaten 29.Spinner Neil McGarrell was the top West Indies bowler with three for44.

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