Chawaguta upbeat about Zimbabwe's future

Zimbabwe coach Walter Chawaguta has said that the recent tournament in Canada flagged some major issues that need to be addressed in the coming months.Zimbabwe turned in some good performances in Toronto, but they were overshadowed by a tie against Canada (which Zimbabwe won on a bowl out) and subsequent defeats by Kenya and, most embarrassingly, Uganda, in Nairobi.”I can’t say that I’m excited, but at the same time, I’m not disappointed,” Chawaguta told the Independent . “There is a lot of hard work to be done, and fortunately for me, it’s all got to do with the mentality of the players. We have had some success, but we have some issues too. Our batting is still an issue, we have had two or three guys, guys like Hamilton Masakadza and Tatenda Taibu coming through but not getting the necessary backing.”Our pace-bowling is improving although I’m not entirely happy. But our spinners Ray Price and Prosper Utseya have been outstanding, and Timmy Maruma is also coming up pretty fine.”We are focusing more on this process where we will build on the positives and work on our weakness, which we are doing at the moment and I’m happy with how the players have been responding and I am pretty confident we can only move forward as a team.”After Tuesday’s washout, Zimbabwe need to beat Kenya tomorrow to ensure they get through to Saturday’s tri-series final. From there, they fly home and straight into a five-ODI series against Sri Lanka. Although a return series is planned in 2009, aside from that there is little cricket on the horizon for Chawaguta’s players.

Ponting sees positive signs on Tait

Ricky Ponting hopes Shaun Tait will be back in Australia’s team in the future © Getty Images
 

Ricky Ponting is confident that Shaun Tait can make a successful return to Test cricket following his self-imposed exile from the game. Tait is preparing for his first-class comeback with South Australia after appearing in Australia A’s one-day tour of India last month.Tait believes his best chance of again featuring in the international arena will be in ODIs. His decision to walk away from the game in January due to mental and physical exhaustion followed his unsuccessful return to Test cricket and a disappointing run with injuries.”We all want to see him do well for South Australia when he goes back home as well,” Ponting told . “Once he gets some Shield cricket under his belt for South Australia, his opinion on playing Test cricket then might change, but at the moment he’s only played the shorter versions really and lots of positive signs there.”For someone like Shaun that [one-day cricket] would be the easier way back. The rigours on your body and your mental state I guess through a Test match or a tough Test match tour can really wear you down, there’s no doubt about that.”Tait, 25, has proven a destructive force in ODIs and has 33 wickets from 18 games, including an outstanding tally of 23 victims in the 2007 World Cup. His three Tests have been less successful – he has five wickets at 60.40 – but Ponting believes that Tait could still be a useful addition to the Test attack in the future.”I think he can be a match-winner for us in Test cricket,” Ponting said. “If he gets his body right and his mind right then we’ll hope down the track he does want to play five-day stuff with us.”

Wet outfield threatens play on third day

ScorecardThe routine overnight shower has washed out the final day of the three-day fixture at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, with only 23.1 overs being bowled. The umpires had scheduled an inspection of the pitch at 12.30pm, but the scene was very similar to yesterday when play was called off without a ball being bowled.Things couldn’t have gotten any worse for the teams or the groundstaff. While the rain kept away through the daylight hours for the first couple of days, it came pelting down shortly after 11.00am today. The outfield was completely waterlogged, forcing the umpires to call off play without hesitation. One of the Australian players splashed around in one of the puddles, keeping his team-mates and the few onlookers in splits.On a more serious note, the weather patterns over the last few days could jeopardise the start of the one-day tri-series, with three back-to-back games starting Monday. The teams then head to Chennai for the remainder of the series.

Cat got your tongue, boys?

As easy as the flick of a finger: Ajantha Mendis celebrates after removing Rahul Dravid, his first Test wicket © Getty Images
 

The band played on
The in-house band – trumpets, booming drums and all – started belting out tunes in the morning. But with empty plastic seats and chairs staring at you from every corner of the ground, it was hard to see who they were playing for. Unless Asian cricket heeds Geoffrey Boycott’s suggestion and starts giving serious thought to day-night Tests, it will soon resemble the man who loves the sound of his own voice in an empty room.Whetting the appetite
Unless you’re Farokh Engineer or Michael Slater, the over before lunch, or any other interval, tends to be played out in circumspect fashion. That isn’t Tillakaratne Dilshan’s style though. He had 97 when Harbhajan Singh came on to bowl the final over of the first session, and a meaty sweep took him to his century from just 145 balls. After a hesitant start on the second evening, the next 80 runs had taken him a mere 90 balls.Hook, line and sinker
Perhaps Virender Sehwag had read about Allen Stanford’s winner-take-all Twenty20 game in the Caribbean and perhaps the band seduced him into thinking that he was playing in front of a rum-happy Trini Posse. Either way, there wasn’t much thought involved in the top-edged hook off Nuwan Kulasekara that went straight to the man at square leg. In Twenty20 terms, 25 off 16 balls is sterling stuff. This, though, was a five-day game that needed to be saved.I flick, you miss
Ajantha Mendis didn’t make the sort of immediate impact that he had in the Asia Cup final, and when Gautam Gambhir dismissively swatted a full toss through midwicket for four in his opening over, you feared that all the hype and nervous excitement had got to the young man. We needn’t have worried. The first ball of his fifth over was a ripper, the delivery now christened the carrom ball. It pitched on middle stump and crashed into the top of off after a hesitant spar from Rahul Dravid.Cat got your tongue, boys?
One welcome consequence of the review system for umpiring decisions has been a marked reduction in the number of silly appeals. But that can be a two-edged sword as Sri Lanka found out on the third afternoon. Mendis got one to pitch on middle and leg, and go on to rap Sourav Ganguly on the pad. The fact that the ball then ricocheted onto the bat appeared to distract the Sri Lankans who didn’t even appeal. A big let-off for Ganguly, albeit one that he couldn’t take advantage of.Ignore the old master at your peril
With such a fuss being made about the Mendis debut, some forgot that the man bowling from the other end came into the game with the small matter of 735 Test wickets. And as champions tend to do, Muttiah Muralitharan saved his best for one of the game’s other legends. Sachin Tendulkar decided to shoulder arms to a doosra bowled from round the wicket, but a brief moment of hesitancy was to be his undoing. The ball took the inner edge of the bat as he was lifting it out of harm’s way and then dropped onto the stumps. Clash of the titans won, and perhaps a Test match too.

Watson stars in easy Australian win

Scorecard

Shane Watson’s 95 helped the Australians toward 337 © Getty Images
 

Shane Watson belted 95 from 85 balls to push his case for an opening slot in the ODI series as the Australians comfortably outclassed the University of West Indies Vice-Chancellor’s XI at the Three Ws Oval. Australia triumphed by 211 runs in the day-night encounter, which was also notable for Nathan Bracken’s three-wicket return in his first match for Australia since having knee surgery in March.After the stand-in captain Michael Clarke chose to bat, Shaun Marsh and Watson began proceedings aggressively, but Marsh could not build on his good start, falling for 38 off Darren Sammy. Michael Hussey was the next man in, and he blitzed exactly 50 and added 103 with Watson.Watson increased his boundary count to six fours and four sixes, but fell short of a hundred when Kavesh Kantasingh, the left-arm spinner, hung on to an outstanding caught-and-bowled chance. Still, the effort was probably enough to ensure Watson opens in the first ODI on Tuesday as Australia require replacements for the injured Matthew Hayden and the retired Adam Gilchrist.After Watson departed, Clarke made merry, scoring 53 off 35 balls, before retiring to give the other batsmen an opportunity to fine-tune their batting. The final thrust to the Australians’ innings was given by David Hussey, who launched five sixes in his 55, and Cameron White, who made 34.The Vice-Chancellor’s XI found the Australian pace attack tough to handle when they began the chase, collapsing to 44 for 4 with each of the first four bowlers taking a wicket. Denesh Ramdin, among five players in the team with international experience, briefly delayed the inevitable by making 43, but he fell to David Hussey’s part-time offspin.Bracken then took a brace of tail-end wickets as the home side folded up in the 34th over. Australia rested Ricky Ponting and Brett Lee, while Brad Haddin sat out to give his broken finger more time to recover and Andrew Symonds, who is in doubt for Tuesday’s game, continued to have back problems.

Amla ton guides South Africa to safety


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Hashim Amla’s resilience bodes well for South Africa in the rest of the series © Getty Images
 

Hashim Amla’s fifth Test hundred guided South Africa safely to a draw on the fifth and final day at Lord’s. Two days ago, it seemed unlikely the visitors scrap it out into the fifth, yet it was England – the team who so dominated the first three days – who trudged off wearily 75 minutes after tea. South Africa may not have won, but they will take heart from their characteristically dogged performance with the second Test only four days away.Remarkably, this was the sixth draw in as many Tests at Lord’s. Indeed, the home of cricket hasn’t witnessed a win since Australia’s 239-run win in the 2005 Ashes, and barring a spectacular collapse by South Africa, it was unlikely that the trend would be broken today by Michael Vaughan’s men. This isn’t to discredit a wholehearted bowling performance, more to emphasise the benign surface that Lord’s has produced over the last few years. In truth, they needed an Andrew Flintoff, and shortly after play his name was included in England’s 12-man squad for Headingley.Amla and Neil McKenzie deadened the match in the morning session, surviving unscathed at lunch, though by no means did England simply go through the motions. They persisted in a war of bouncers against Amla, attacking his supposed weakness; James Anderson, in particular, cranked up impressive pace from the Pavilion End, and fired in bumper after bumper to try and unsettle Amla. Yet not even an extraordinary leg-side field reminiscent of Bodyline could waver Amla’s concentration, as he ducked, weaved and evaded all Anderson threw at him. Anything on his legs was duly whipped through midwicket with subcontinental elasticity. With Amla nudging and nurdling on a lifeless pitch, this was more Lahore than Lord’s.Meanwhile, McKenzie continued where he left off last night, showing remarkable resolve as he notched up his 400th ball faced. Such were England’s attacking fields that anything wide could be easily dispatched, as was the case when Stuart Broad offered McKenzie a gift outside his off stump that was languidly back-cut.Not even the introduction of Monty Panesar could turn England’s fortunes for the better.In fact, Panesar bowled the first over of the day to McKenzie, and could well have had him caught at short-leg, the ball narrowly evading his bat. Yet thereafter, for all his guile and occasional turn, Panesar was rarely a threat – unsurprisingly given the pitch’s lack of bounce. Only occasionally did the odd ball leap alarmingly, and Amla’s concentration failed him for once when he drove loosely at a wider spinning delivery. The very next ball was thumped through cover for four, before Amla nurtured more runs through midwicket to bring up the pair’s hundred partnership from 250 balls, and his own cultured fifty from 116 balls. The match was subsiding into a draw.

Smart stats
  • South Africa saved a Test after following on for the tenth time in 38 matches. England have failed to win a Test the last three times they have asked South Africa to follow on.
  • South Africa batted 167 overs after being asked to follow on, which is their second-highest in the second innings since their readmission into Test cricket. They had faced 209.2 overs against the same opposition after following on in Durban in 1999.
  • Three South African batsmen hit hundreds in their second innings, only the second time a team following on has managed three centuries in their innings.
  • South Africa closed their innings at 393 for 3 declared, the lowest total in which three individual centuries have been scored.
  • Monty Panesar bowled 60 of the 167 overs in South Africa’s second innings, the most he’s bowled in an innings. Only Ashley Giles has bowled more overs in an innings for England since 2000.
  • Ryan Sidebottom gave away 46 runs in his 30 overs, equalling the most economical spell of 30 overs or more in this decade by an England bowler.

Or was it? England were given cause for brief hope just after lunch when Anderson, visibly tiring in the field, offered McKenzie a wide to which he slashed behind to Tim Ambrose. In strode the ominous figure of Jacques Kallis, who made just 7 in the first innings, and again he struggled to pick up England’s seamers, driving streakily just wide of Alastair Cook in the gully. Panesar troubled him in the next over, too, with one that finally spat up off a length, but Kallis responded in commanding style to pull him over midwicket. The authority he showed in one stroke eluded him entirely a few overs later, however.Sidebottom chose this moment to produce his best ball of the match to South Africa’s best batsman. Appearing to angle across Kallis, it bent back markedly on the right-hander to rip out his middle stump. South Africa were effectively 11 for 3, and the excitement of the situation chivvied Panesar into producing a fine over to the new batsman, Ashwell Prince. Two very close shouts for lbw were turned down by Daryl Harper, while Prince insisted on padding up to viciously-spun balls turning out of the rough.As South Africa took the lead, Amla visibly settled, working twos through midwicket and occasionally pouncing the odd boundary off any strays that England offered. His was a controlled, disciplined innings – the type none of his team-mates, with the exception of Prince, could muster in the first innings; the like of which South Africa will need at Headingley, too. A back-cut for four brought up his hundred from 231 balls, and the match was as good as saved.Farce briefly threatened to scuff the shine off South Africa’s gutsy effort when the umpires halted play for bad light – in near-bright sunshine. And a patient crowd were then victim to watching Alastair Cook’s time-stalling offbreaks for an over, before common sense prevailed and an exhausted Graeme Smith gave the thumbs up to Michael Vaughan from the balcony. The match might have petered to a draw, but both sides have given a tempting glimpse into the battles that lie ahead in the final three Tests.

Watson! Watson!

Glenn McGrath was hit for three consecutive boundaries by Graeme Smith (file photo) © AFP
 

Crowd favourite: Half an hour before the first semi-final, the Wankhede was only about half full. An hour into the game the crowd, now packed to the rafters, was screaming “Watson, Watson” as he smashed Delhi’s bowlers to all parts of the ground. Mumbai has been known to cheer only their own but two neutral teams contesting the semi-final meant that the fans could cheer for the excellent cricket, irrespective of who was playing it.VIP treatment: The union railways minister Lalu Prasad Yadav arrived for the match surrounded by a throng of commandos who wanted to sit next to him to guard him. However, the MCA officials, owners of the VVIP box that sits atop the Garware Pavilion, objected and tempers had to be calmed by Ratnakar Shetty, the BCCI chief operating officer. Lalit Modi was obviously irritated and was seen shaking his head.Walking wounded: Graeme Smith was struggling with his leg and his footwork was severely restricted. Glenn McGrath tried to capitalise on the weakness but Smith countered by using his bottom hand to lift two consecutive deliveries for four to deep midwicket. McGrath then replied with a yorker which swung into Smith. Forgetting his injury for a moment, Smith punched hard at the ball, sending it racing to the long-off boundary before hobbling away to the side in pain.Catch it right: The pull from Swapnil Asnodkar came in flat, fast, and above chest height towards Farveez Maharoof at deep fine leg. The thumb rule for catching at that height is to take it with hands cupped in front of the chest – the conventional way. Maharoof tried to catch it Aussie style – with fingers pointing upwards – and spilled it. The ball bounced off his hands, hit his face and went over the boundary for four.Gambhir plays into Watson’s hands: With the asking-rate climbing steadily, Gautam Gambhir, Delhi’s best batsman, decided to force matters but failed repeatedly. He charged out of his crease to pull but was beaten by Watson’s quick bouncer. He then tried to slash through covers but was beaten yet again. A second attempt at pulling also failed and when Gambhir finally connected with a fierce cut, he saw Taruwar Kohli dive to his right to pull off a stunning catch at cover.

Ponting returns for Tigers ING Cup clash with Warriors

The Tasmanian Selectors have today announced the Cascade Tasmanian Tigers squad to play the Western Warriors in the Day-Night ING Cup match on Friday 6th December, 2002 at the WACA Ground in Perth.CASCADE TASMANIAN TIGERS

Ricky PONTING (Captain)
Sean CLINGELEFFER
Jamie COX
Graeme CUNNINGHAM
Brett GEEVES
Michael DIGHTON
Michael Di VENUTO
Xavier DOHERTY
Adam GRIFFITH
Daniel MARSH
Scott KREMERSKOTHEN
Shane WATSON
Damien WRIGHT
The 13th man will be announced on the morning of the match.There is only one change to the team that defeated the Southern Redbacks in Adelaide last Friday night. George Bailey makes way for Captain Ricky Ponting who is available for this match.

England flattered to deceive – and still face a battle in Adelaide

As fleetingly as the English resistance appeared, it went away just asquickly. Unable to build on the foundation, Michael Vaughan had laid forthem, a score of 342 had to be settled for after 450 had seemed a possibility.Losing seven wickets for 47 didn’t do anything to dispel the perception of a brittle Englishlower-order line-up. Warne and Gillespie ripped through them without too muchfuss.There is not enough consistency for England if they wish to compete againstAustralia. They require sustained periods of excellence both with bat andball. Not glimpses of it.Vaughan basically played a lone hand as no other English player passed 50.Are England playing like the West Indies were a few years ago when all youhad to do was dismiss Brian Lara and the innings would unravel before youreyes?Matthew Hayden and Justin Langer knocked off 100 runs in the blink of an eyewith 342 looking more inadequate by the second.England can still lose this game by an innings. Something which lookedhighly unlikely when they were 2/240, but cricket is a game made up ofperformances by individuals within the fabric of a team.Superb efforts by Warne, Gillespie and McGrath dragged Australia back intothe game. They bowled tirelessly to restrict the Englishman and after thebreakthrough was made, homed in on the lengthy English tail.There is no doubt that cricket is a batsman’s game but it is the differencein class between the bowlers of the two sides which will decide this series,England do not have the same resources in the field that Steve Waugh cancall on. Not one of the English bowlers looks as though he is a constantthreat of taking wickets. They wait or pray for an Australian mistake asopposed to being able to force one.Losing three of their starting bowlers from the original tour party hasn’thelped matters either. The field placings must pay some attention to savingruns which allows the Australian batsmen even more freedom.The shortcomings of the bowlers comes back onto the English batsmen. Theyare then required to bat out long periods of time or do somethingextraordinary if England are to hope to have even a modicum chance ofsuccess.Different times to when England could boast class bowlers such as John Snow,Bob Willis, Derek Underwood, Ian Botham, Graham Dilley, John Emburey and Phil Edmonds.Facing bowlers such as these, the Australians didn’t have the carte blanchethey seem to have done.So where to for England from here? -Defeat in Adelaide means basically theend of the series and another long summer with the only point of interest beingwhether England can snatch a win in a dead rubber like they have on their last twotrips down under.

Bowling is still the main job in Cairns' mind

World-class New Zealand all-rounder Chris Cairns told the audience at the launch of his book ‘Chris Cairns’ last night that he regards bowling as his trade, and batting as his enjoyment.Speaking at the function organised at the Christchurch Casino, Cairns said getting a five-wicket haul when bowling was the most satisfying aspect of the game.Cairns, who missed the last part of New Zealand’s international season when needing more surgery on his troublesome knees, said he was feeling very good.”My rehabilitation has gone well but it is all in the lap of the cricketing gods,” he said.Cairns said he wasn’t motivated by statistics in the way that Sir Richard Hadlee had been during his career, nor was he blessed with the superb bowling action that Hadlee enjoyed.”I have to work harder on my bowling, I’m not as gifted with my action as he was,” he said.A video presentation of some of the highlights of his career was shown during the evening and inevitably resulted in questions to him about some of the notable moments. He recalled the occasion in 2000 when hitting Australian fast bowler Brett Lee out of the Basin Reserve in the second Test of the series.The Australians had been getting frustrated with the way New Zealand were batting when Lee bowled a short ball to Cairns which he swung at, although his eyes were closed when he connected with the ball, which he hooked over fine leg and into the gardens outside the ground.”I walked down the pitch and Flem [Stephen Fleming] said to me ‘What have you done?’ and I said ‘I just wanted to have a whack at it.’ Flem described it as ‘a moment of clarity.'”Cairns did say that managing to get Australia’s leg-spinning maestro Shane Warne away at times during the last few years had been satisfying.”Warnie made me look so stupid during the first part of my career.”For me to have played alongside a bloke like that was a privilege. I remember at one stage during the Test in Hamilton I took a single with a hit to long off and as I ran by him I heard Warnie say: ‘Thank God for that’, and that was one of the highlights of my career to hear that he was pleased I was down the other end, because so often I had been trying to get down to get away from him in the past.”Asked who were some of the hardest bowlers to hit, Cairns said Sri Lanka’s Muttiah Muralitharan was ‘quite hard’ to hit, as were bowlers who didn’t put any pace on the ball.Among the speakers at the function were his New Zealand team-mates Chris Harris, Nathan Astle and Craig McMillan who poked fun at Cairns over some of their experiences with him during their careers.Others to speak were former New Zealand captain Martin Crowe and former chief executive of New Zealand Cricket Christopher Doig.Crowe recalled the morning of Cairns’ first Test, against Australia at Perth in 1989, when he travelled down in the hotel lift with Cairns.”He was white with fear, a broken man, he was too young at 19 and suffered a stress fracture to his back in that game.”But I also remember when he came back and took a six-for against England and then he went through the most hopeless cricket regime I’ve ever seen in 1995/96.”It took an Aussie, finally, after seven years to sort him out,” he said.Steve Rixon had told Cairns to go out and express himself and as a result for the last five years he had blessed New Zealand with his skill and had made commentary for Crowe a great joy.Crowe said that Cairns’ feats with bat and ball put him in a statistical club whose only other members were Keith Miller, Gary Sobers, Ian Botham and Imran Khan.Doig said it was fair to say that there was nobody who had given him more pleasure, nor greater concern, than Cairns.But there had been no doubt that the “Black Caps walked a little taller, played with greater self-respect when a fully-fit, focused and fizzing Chris Cairns walked onto the paddock with them.”Doig said when a fully-fit Dion Nash was also available the pair were formidable, bringing out the best in their respective games.”It was one of the great tragedies that it was so infrequently that they played together.”Chris had a fierce individual determination to carve out his niche in New Zealand cricket. He was passionate about doing well, and New Zealand cricket doing well,” he said.There were times when his frustrations would boil over and end up inappropriately in the media but he had grown to understand the processes needed to advance his own, and New Zealand’s game.”He emerged from the shadow of his father [Lance] and was the greatest all-rounder in cricket today,” Doig said and it was with huge satisfaction that Cairns had matured into an outstanding individual in his own right.