Canterbury hold advantage in tour match destined for draw

Gary Stead had a dream day as Canterbury took control of the second match against shell-shocked tourists Zimbabwe.Stead said it was “one of our better days’ performances over the whole season,” as Canterbury declared at 330/5, and reduced Zimbabwe to 112/4 at the close.In sharp contrast to Stead’s pleasure at his first century against an international team were the fates of teammate Nathan Astle and Zimbabwe’s Grant Flower.Astle, playing under orders from the selectors to find his batting form, edged a ball to the keeper after just three overs of the morning session. He again failed to move his feet and showed the weaknesses he displayed so often in the recent Test series in South Africa.Flower, a key man in the Zimbabwe team, looks set to be out for the Test which begins on Boxing Day, having fractured a finger while fielding off his own bowling. He did not return to the ground from hospital, suggesting a serious injury and a major blow to his team’s Test prospects.After play had begun half an hour late due to a sodden outfield, caused by an overnight electrical storm, Astle went early to Zimbabwe’s only potent bowler, paceman Henry Olonga, who finished with 3/78.Gareth Hopkins came in and with Stead saw the team through to lunch without further alarm at 258/5, with Stead 58 and his partner 24. After the interval the partnership exploded into action, with 72 runs coming in 16 overs of admittedly tame decaration bowling. It was during this period Flower left the field in agony, his finger a crumpled mess.Having reached 100 in 173 balls (the second 50 taking just 69), with Hopkins going to 50 (off 104 balls) in the same Viljoen over, Stead made a planned declaration.The Zimbabweans’ hoped-for batting practice was detonated by Shane Bond’s explosive opening spell of 2/8. Guy Whittall and Trevor Madondo were both caught at the wicket to make the score 11/2 after twelve and a half overs. Whittall was caught by James off Bond with the score on 007! Stead thought the team “bowled exceptionally well” on a pitch “with not much pace to it”.After tea, taken at 33/2, the ten-man tourists collapsed further, with Rennie holing out and Wade Cornelius taking his maiden first-class wicket, Dirk Viljoen being caught behind second ball. Earlier, Astle’s wretched match had continued when he dropped Gavin Rennie off Cornelius at second slip in the fifth over with only seven on the scoreboard.At last one Zimbabwean showed his true class when youngster Douglas Marillier took to the flighted spin of Redmond. He and the uncomfortable looking Mluleki Nkala saw off the fast bowlers, attacked for a while, then shut up shop, adding just 34 runs in 20 overs in the last hour.Although the game seems destined to be a draw, having been taken as no more than a particularly serious type of practice match by most players, Stead has done his chances of a Black Cap recall no harm. As he says: “All I can do is keep getting runs [he has 368 at an average of 90 this season] and trying to embarrass the selectors into picking me.”He expresses “no preference” to where he bats, preferring to “do what is best for the team”. Incidentally, he was never going to stand down for this game as he had never played against the Zimbabweans before and thus was keen to make the starting XI.What price, if Astle or McMillan fail again in the forthcoming test, he might make the next international starting XI?

Chanaka Welegedera migrates to Australia

Sri Lanka left-arm seamer Chanaka Welegedara has migrated to Australia after being overlooked for the home Test series against Pakistan. The move makes a Sri Lanka comeback highly unlikely.His club, Tamil Union, hosted a farewell event for Welegedara on Monday, before he left the country this week. “Unfortunately, the Sri Lankan selectors preferred to go with younger options against Pakistan recently, and Welegedera has decided to pursue his career in Melbourne, where he’ll be playing out his days in club cricket,” said Suresh Murugaser, vice president of Tamil Union. Murugaser said Welegedara had received permanent residency in Australia, where the bowler believes his family would be better off.”He had a good domestic season, even setting a T20 record for the most economical spell, against SSC this year,” Murugaser said. “But despite that he was not chosen.”Welegedara, 34, had been Sri Lanka’s leading seam bowler in a handful of matches, memorably taking a five-wicket haul to help Sri Lanka win their first Test in South Africa. However, his international career was affected by a slew of injuries. In the eight years since his Sri Lanka debut, he has only played 21 Tests and 10 ODIs. He had 55 Test wickets at an average of 41.32.

Liverpool keen on Lautaro Martinez move

Liverpool are interested in signing Inter Milan star Lautaro Martinez if Mohamed Salah leaves, according to Serie A journalist Niccolo Ceccarini.

The Lowdown: Martinez shines for Inter

The 24-year-old has become one of the key figures at Inter in recent years, scoring 14 goals in just 21 Serie A starts this season, not to mention registering two assists.

Martinez has been described as ‘spectacular’ by the one and only Lionel Messi, which is high praise indeed, and it could be that he is on the move at the end of the season, with Inter seemingly already eyeing up replacements in the shape of Paulo Dybala and Gianluca Scamacca.

The £63million-rated Argentine’s current deal in Milan expires in the summer of 2026.

The Latest: Liverpool keen on signing

Speaking to Tuttomercatoweb [via Sport Witness], Ceccarini claimed that Liverpool are interested in making a move for Martinez if Salah leaves:

“As for Lautaro, the club’s (Inter’s) position is very clear. The Argentine striker remains central and fundamental in the Nerazzurri project, but in the face of a big offer, Inter will still make a reflection.

“We have to understand if a big European name will come forward concretely. Liverpool is a possibility, especially if Salah should leave at the end of this season.”

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The Verdict: Hard to see happening

While Martinez is undoubtedly a special talent who could thrive at one of Europe’s top teams, it is hard to see Liverpool signing him this summer.

In Salah, Sadio Mane, Luis Diaz, Diogo Jota and Roberto Firmino, the Reds already have five magnificent options in attack, so the Inter man would struggle for playing time if he came in.

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The only way that a move would make sense is if Salah, Mane or Firmino moved on, with the trio all out of contract in 2023, but there is no guarantee that that will happen.

In other news, a journalist has made an exciting claim regarding one Liverpool target. Read more here.

Sussex dent Yorkshire's hopes

ScorecardYorkshire’s hopes of winning the Pro Arch Trophy were dented by Sussex who beat them by nine runs in the tournament’s penultimate match.Yorkshire need to beat UAE in the final match to finish level on points with Lancashire and Somerset, and they need a comprehensive win to overtake their Roses rivals.Sussex got off to a good start, reaching 110 for 1 before losing three wickets without addition. The middle order rallied to boost them to 209 for 8, seemingly a below-par score in the conditions.Yorkshire also started well before losing their way, 19-year-old Will Beer taking two quick wickets and thereafter the innings fell away.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Lancashire 4 3 1 0 0 6 +1.055 973/200.0 762/200.0
Somerset 4 3 1 0 0 6 +0.324 857/177.4 900/200.0
Yorkshire 3 2 1 0 0 4 +0.553 701/150.0 618/150.0
Essex 4 2 2 0 0 4 -0.312 966/199.3 1024/198.4
Sussex 4 1 3 0 0 2 -0.585 796/200.0 900/197.1
U.A.E. 3 0 3 0 0 0 -1.240 593/150.0 682/131.2

Yorkshire confirm Younis will play

Younis Khan: almost ready to board his flight © AFP

Yorkshire have confirmed that Younis Khan will be available for their opening Championship match, against Surrey at The Oval, despite speculation that his county stint would be prevented by the Pakistan board.Younis will join up with his team-mates on April 16 ahead of his debut for Yorkshire two days later and he said: “I am aware the PCB have expressed concerns about the fitness levels of some of our players and are unhappy about their involvement in county cricket.”However, I have played a lot of domestic cricket in Pakistan and am very fit right now. I will definitely be playing for Yorkshire next week.”Pakistan are scheduled to play in Abu Dhabi against Sri Lanka in a three-match ODI series in May, but Younis has told Yorkshire that he has discussed the situation with the PCB and is unlikely to be involved.Yorkshire chief executive Stewart Regan added: “We have had clearance from the PCB that Younis can play for the Club and are unsure as to why concerns have been expressed about his availability. Flights are booked and he joins us on Saturday.”The PCB have already prevented Younis’s team-mate, Umar Gul, from taking up his contract with Gloucestershire after concerns over his fitness.

Nets could decide Lee's partner

Michael Kasprowicz pushes his case for inclusion at training © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting is unsure who will get the nod as Brett Lee’s new-ball partner in the first Test against South Africa starting on Thursday. Australia are heavily favoured to pick the spinners Shane Warne and Stuart MacGill on a surface expected to turn and Stuart Clark and Michael Kasprowicz are the leading contenders for the second fast-bowling place.”It’s going to be wicket-reliant as much as anything,” Ponting said in . “I spoke to the Newlands groundsman leading up to the one-day game, and he seemed to think it might spin a bit here in the Test match. If we go in with two spinners, then as to which other quick I’m really not sure yet.”Ponting said the decision could rely on how the fast men, including the spare bowler Shaun Tait, perform in the nets. The Australians had a full session on Tuesday and will have a top-up training today as they attempt to gain Test focus in the three days after Sunday’s dramatic one-day loss. “It might just come down to whoever impresses the most in the nets,” Ponting said.Clark has been with the squad for the entire tour and his similarities to Glenn McGrath were expected to help him towards a Test debut. However, he has been part of the one-day attack belted by South Africa and Kasprowicz, who picked up 44 Pura Cup wickets this summer, could play his first international match since Trent Bridge in 2005.The work of Clark, who collected four victims in his past four matches at an economy rate of 5.82, has impressed Ponting. “He’s bowled beautifully,” Ponting told . “He hasn’t bowled with the new ball, but he’s been on fairly early in every game. He’s been difficult and uncomfortable for their batsmen.”Clark has not played a first-class match since November but Ponting did not think his lack of bowling would be a problem. “He’s in really good touch at the moment and I don’t think [not playing a four-day game] will worry him too much. He’s done a lot of bowling since he’s been here.”Ponting said Kasprowicz also had “a few things going for him” and the decision would be a difficult one. “One of my strengths is adaptability, both in my style of bowling and having an impact in different conditions,” Kasprowicz said in .South Africa have picked a 14-man squad for the first two Tests and Ponting said he had a good idea how they would play. “They’ll try and grind out their runs as much as they can, bat for long periods of time and try to make us bat for a long time in order to score our runs,” he said in . “They won’t let us get away too much.”

Streak hits back at Flower

Heath Streak: ‘At no stage did I force the other players into not playing international cricket’© Getty Images

Heath Streak, the former Zimbabwe captain, has hit back at Andy Flower’s accusation, made in May’s edition of The Wisden Cricketer, that he ended his year-long protest against the Zimbabwe Cricket Union (ZCU) too soon, and returned to international cricket before any relevant changes had been implemented. Streak and several others withdrew from the team early last year in protest at what they termed the racist selection policies that the ZCU had adopted.”At no stage did I force the other players into not playing international cricket,” Streak was quoted as saying on the cricket365.com website. “I made it clear to them the risks they were taking, and the decision taken was a collective one. I feel that Andy is not fully up to speed with what has been going on in Zimbabwe cricket recently.”Streak, who is currently playing county cricket with Warwickshire, returned to the international scene last month against South Africa, along with Andy Blignaut. Streak also mentioned that the ZCU had agreed to act on the recommendations put forward by the rebels.”The ICC commission that investigated Zimbabwe cricket made recommendations to the ZCU about selection issues,” said Streak. “The ZCU have agreed to act on the report, and the situation is now much better than it was.”I regret that the matter took the course it did and went on as long as it did,” he continued. “But we have settled our differences and now the aim is to make sure that we perform well on the international stage.”Zimbabwe were thrashed by South Africa 2-0 in Tests and 3-0 in one-day internationals last month. New Zealand are scheduled to visit them in August, although that series is currently in some doubt, with political pressure being applied by the New Zealand government.

Dippenaar heroics not enough

South Africa 269 for 6 (Dippenaar 110*, Smith 71, Akhtar 4-49) lost by eight runs to Pakistan 277 for 6 (Malik 82*, Youhana 68, Hameed 56)
ScorecardBoeta Dippenaar did his best, fighting off heat and humidity, testing spells from Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Sami, the wiles of Mushtaq Ahmed and Shoaib Malik, and hundreds of insects swarming under the lights of the Gaddafi stadium, but in the end Pakistan’s total of 277 proved to be just out of the reach of the South Africans. A nerveless final over from Mohammad Sami left them nine runs short of their target, as top-flight cricket returned to Pakistan for the first time since May 2002.Pakistan’s innings was no less riveting, especially the last ten overs. South Africa had kept them under control for most part, but then a spectacular innings by Shoaib Malik, who made 82 off 41 balls and hit five sixes in the last two overs alone, undid all the good work done by South Africa in the first 40 overs of the innings, and took Pakistan to 276 for 6.After Malik’s late charge, Pakistan would have fancied their chances under lights with a full-strength bowling attack, but it turned out to be not so easy after all. Akhtar and Sami beat the bat often in searching first spells, and the first seven overs of the innings yielded just 22. But Smith and Dippenaar, opening the innings in place of the injured Herschelle Gibbs, hung on grimly in difficult conditions, and scrapped it out till the runs began to come a little more easily. Once the opening bowlers were off, the two batsmen took every opportunity to attack the second string. The first 15 overs went for 79, as the two batsmen continued to keep abreast of the asking rate while keeping their wickets intact.But with Smith struggling with cramp, and calling for a runner, it became evident that he would go after the bowling before fatigue overwhelmed him totally, and Inzamam saw his chance and brought Akhtar back for a second spell. Akhtar immediately removed Smith, chipping a catch tamely to mid-on, and then, steaming in at full throttle at the new batsman Jacques Kallis, beat him for pace with a short ball and got him to chop it down onto his stumps (140 for 2).In hindsight, South Africa would consider that they let the game slip away in a little period of play at this juncture of the game. Neil McKenzie came out to join Dippenaar, and with the asking-rate climbing to well over six an over, Inzamam removed Shoaib from the attack and asked the batsmen to force the pace against the spin of Mushtaq and Malik. McKenzie was entirely clueless against the wiles of Mushtaq, and the two batsmen scratched around for several overs. As the overs slipped by, but no increase in the run-rate could be effected, both batsmen acquired an increasingly frantic air.Twice McKenzie skied the ball into the offside in trying to hit down the ground, and both times he was dropped, first by Abdul Razzaq and then by Inzamam. Runs came in fits and starts, although South Africa would have begun to hope again when 16 came off the 43rd over of the innings, bowled by Mushtaq.But with South Africa needing 37 from the last four overs, Akhtar returned again for a third and final spell, and dismissed a tired McKenzie with a clever slower ball (241 for 3). Mark Boucher came out to replace McKenzie, and his wild swipe at Akhtar off his very first ball told observers that this was a contest that could have only one conclusion. Three balls later, Akhtar knocked out his leg-stump with an inswinging yorker. And in the next over, Shaun Pollock hit the ball he received to straight to Inzamam at cover and departed for a first-ball duck.All this while, Dippenaar had kept one end up, and with the match having almost slipped away, he lofted Akhtar for four in the penultimate over to bring up his hundred, and then played an astonishing stroke to bring South Africa back into contention, an effortless flicked six off the same bowler that brought the target down to 14 off seven balls. But that was the closest that South Africa came to scenting victory.Pakistan owed their victory, though, to Malik as much as to Akhtar. Malik came in with Pakistan 167 for 4 in the 39th over, about thirty runs short of what they would have liked to be at that stage after two wasteful run-outs. A natural hitter of the ball, he played with great flair from the very beginning, keeping pace with Inzamam-ul-Haq in a partnership of 74 for the fifth wicket.None of the South African bowlers bowled at a pace that could trouble him, and as he grew in confidence he proceeded to get down on one knee to the bowlers, get his left leg out of the way, and mow the bowling over mid-wicket and mid-on.The last two overs, bowled by Shaun Pollock and Jacques Kallis respectively, were carted for 42 runs. Even in an age in which a number of batsmen excel in this kind of late-innings hitting, Malik’s strokemaking, his exceptional eye, and immense power and co-ordination all stood out.Malik’s half-century was the third made by a Pakistani batsman on the day, and undoubtedly the most crucial. Earlier, Yasir Hameed and Yousuf Youhana played accomplished innings, but both were out just when they would have been looking to up the scoring-rate.Hameed started confidently, helped by some loose bowling from Makhaya Ntini, and looked as assured as he had against the Bangladeshis. He lost his opening partner Mohammad Hafeez in the fifth over – Hafeez struggled to get Pollock away and after 15 dot-balls he worked him straight to square-leg – but batted sensibly in the company of Youhana, working the ball away for singles and picking up the odd boundary with drives through the off side or his trademark flick over midwicket.The eventual manner of his dismissal would have surprised no one who saw Hameed and Youhana bat together in the one-day internationals against Bangladesh. Hameed punched the left-arm spinner Peterson towards long-off and set off for a run, but Graeme Smith made good ground at cover to cut the ball off, and Hameed was left stranded halfway down the wicket by Youhana, who let his attention be diverted by the fielder. Youhana was run out in a similar mix-up with Hameed in the first one-day international against Bangladesh when one short of a half-century, and now he returned the compliment and sent Hameed on his way for 56 (100 for 2).Younis Khan too ran himself out after playing himself in, and finally Youhana himself failed to carry a good start through to the end, nicking a ball from Andrew Hall and departing for 68 (167 for 4). But as it turned out, he needn’t have worried, for Malik was more than up to the task of carrying Pakistan through to a sizeable total. South Africa’s bowling and fielding was disciplined for the best part of the innings, but Smith would have left the field conscious of the lack of penetration in the bowling, and especially the thinness of his spin bowling resources.Peterson’s eight overs of left-arm spin were no more than adequate, and with Makhaya Ntini having an off-day, too much responsibility was thrust on the shoulders of Kallis, Andrew Hall and Alan Dawson. In the end, not even Pollock could escape the force of the flashing blade of Malik, as he played one of the very best late-order innings ever seen in one-day international cricket.

Records tumble as England women strike form at last

Caroline Atkins and Arran Thompson set a new record opening partnership for England by putting 150 on the board without loss at the end of the first day of the first Test against India at Lucknow.Atkins (64*) and Thompson (60*), also made their highest individual scores in internationals. They were opening together for the seventh time forEngland after captain Clare Connor won the toss.Thompson said: “Our weakness on tour has been forming partnerships and wereally worked as a partnership today.”Atkins added: “It’s great we’re still in but we’ve got a way to go to winthis Test.”Although England have already lost the one-day series after India took an unassailable 3-0 lead, both Thompson and Atkins have found form on the tour, with Thompson scoring 62 and Atkins 42 in warm-up games.

Railways takes first innings honours in the drawn game

Railways and Uttar Pradesh played out a draw in their Central ZoneRanji Trophy encounter at the Sports Stadium in Meerut on Thursday.Railways by the virtue of their first innings lead collected fivepoints and currently lead the zonal table with 18 points from threegames. Uttar Pradesh are languishing in fourth place with just threepoints in two games.Resuming the day at 125/6 in their second innings – an overall lead of202 – Railways lost both overnight batsmen, Kulamani Parida and S Sahucheaply to slide to 147/8. Amit Pagnis and Harvinder Singh puttogether an 82 run ninth wicket stand that frustrated the home team.After Singh’s dismissal for 37 (96 balls, 4 fours, 2 sixes), Pagnisbatted on in the company of last man, Shahid Khan before skipper AbhaySharma closed shutters at 248/9. Pagnis finished unbeaten on 62 (126balls, 7 fours).The target for UP was 326 and with just over forty overs remaining inthe game, they understandably showed little inclination to step up thepace, meandering to 48/2 from 35 overs before stumps were drawn.Wicket keeper Manoj Mudgal was unbeaten on 33 while leg spinner Khantook the opportunity to add two more wickets to his kitty.

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