Warne confirms interest in Indian league

Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath farewelled Test cricket together but they could be reunited in the Indian Cricket League © Getty Images

Shane Warne will join Brian Lara in the Indian Cricket League if his conditions are met, however Warne’s manager conceded that such an agreement was still a long way off. Glenn McGrath has not ruled out his involvement and his manager said negotiations could progress in the next week.The ICL on Monday announced Lara as its first big signing, two months after his name was initially linked with the group. Warne’s manager James Erskine said he had been in talks with ICL officials including Tony Greig.”They haven’t offered what we have asked for, so negotiations are proceeding,” Erskine told the . “Provided the terms and conditions are right, Shane Warne will play, but it’s a long way off before we get the contract signed.” The paper reported that Warne’s proposed pay package was worth up to $2 million.McGrath’s manager, Warren Craig, said he had met with ICL officials some time ago and although there had been few developments since then, this week’s events were likely to speed the process up. “We certainly haven’t ruled it out,” Craig said.”Now Lara has signed, things might start to hot up a bit. Things could start to move over the next week or so.” However, Craig said the ICL had given no indication what salary it would offer to lure McGrath out of retirement six months after his final ODI appearance. The league wants to run its first Twenty20 tournament this October and November with six teams, each of which would ideally feature four international players and two Indian stars, with the rest made up of younger players.

Whither West Indies?

Brian Lara scored his 33rd hundred but it wasn’t enough to help West Indies salvage a draw © AFP

So where do West Indies go from here?To say 300 kilometres south-west to Multan is the obvious answer, but may not be the one most are looking for in the aftermath of the heavy defeat at Lahore. The deeper, more analytical response, is just as self-evident, except that too many people are seeking solace from umpiring errors and an assortment of other excuses so as not to face up to a fundamental reality.As well as the Caribbean cricketers have progressed as a unit in one-day internationals during the course of this year, too many of them still don’t know how to play Test cricket. It’s not just about the results, which are damning enough, but the repetitive manner in which they tend to subside, at home and abroad, which underscore that reality.They are all capable of individual brilliance, and we have seen several of those flashes in the very recent past from batsmen and bowlers alike. But a Test match, like a cricket team, is the sum of its parts. It’s no use dominating opponents for a session if the effort can’t be sustained, day in day out, until victory is achieved.We like to highlight turning points in a match – a key wicket, a brilliant catch or a straight six off the most threatening bowler-because it is easy to hinge a result on one or two incidents. However, in a contest as protracted as this, these are essentially just points along a graph, and the overall effort must be anchored in a solid base of discipline and perseverance, qualities that demand a high level of concentration.Talking about bowling a consistent line or going back and across is the easy part compared to developing those intangible elements in players, the vast majority of whom are the products of a popular culture of instant gratification.Just look at what happened yesterday at the Gaddafi Stadium.Another masterful hundred from Brian Lara, superbly supported by Shivnarine Chanderpaul, finally put some real backbone in the West Indies effort and threatened to give the home team a few worries heading into the final day. Yet from the moment of Lara’s demise, the fight went out of the side (Chanderpaul’s wild swipe at Danish Kaneria shortly after was immediate confirmation) and the last six wickets tumbled for 53 runs.Anything new in that? Close your eyes and call a cricket venue anywhere in the world and there is a very good chance that almost the exact scene would have been played out in that arena at some time over the past 11 years.

Bravo, who 29 months after his Test debut has not yet experienced what it is like to be in a winning Test team, seemed in the mood for some playful old talk with his fellow countryman, except that Lara wasn’t particularly accommodating and at one point in the brief exchange looked as if he was uttering a few stern words

For Lara, it must be an increasingly deflating experience, never mind the usual empty platitudes about learning from this latest setback and staying positive and focused ahead of the next match. What else can he say at a post-match ceremony, that we should forfeit the remaining Tests and play 12 ODIs instead so that everyone can return to preparing for the World Cup?Maybe I’m reading too much into it, especially from this distance, but a little exchange with Dwayne Bravo while both were standing in the slips during the formalities of Pakistan’s second innings appeared much more revealing of Lara’s true feelings. Bravo, who 29 months after his Test debut has not yet experienced what it is like to be in a winning Test team, seemed in the mood for some playful old talk with his fellow countryman, except that Lara wasn’t particularly accommodating and at one point in the brief exchange looked as if he was uttering a few stern words.Again, it may have been nothing, but you never know. It must be galling for Lara to have now scored 5226 runs in vain for West Indies. Vain in the context of at least not losing Test matches (something he has been talking about more and more over the last few months), though clearly not futile in terms of the sheer delight he has brought to fans of the game around the world for the incomparable elegance and style with which he embellishes an insatiable appetite for runs.Some of Lara’s greatest performances – the 688 runs with a double-century and two other hundreds in three Tests in Sri Lanka in 2001 stand out-have come in the midst of comprehensive defeats. In the single-mindedness of youth and the desire to rack up more and more runs and records, the legacy of being a champion batsman in a woeful Test team isn’t all that relevant, because the mind says there is still time to make a difference in the winning column.But time is running out, and even if the evidence of his 33rd Test hundred and third in as many matches against the Pakistanis reaffirms his pre-eminence among contemporary batsmen worldwide, Lara is increasingly haunted by the stark reality that too many of his runs are only of personal statistical value.Like millions of Indian cricket fans and their obsession with Sachin Tendulkar, many Trinis now don’t seem to mind too much that the West Indies have been beaten again, so long as their hero has gotten another hundred.Those indulging in that short-sighted consolation would do well to appreciate, as Lara certainly does, that his Test career has, maybe, another couple years to run and that the game, and the team, are always bigger than the player, never mind how great that player is.Click here to send us your thoughts.

A short history of the Ashes

  • Ashes history: 1861-1888
  • Ashes history: 1890-1914
  • Ashes history: 1920-1938
  • Ashes history: 1946-1970
  • Ashes history: 1970-1989
  • Ashes history: 1990-present

“In affectionate remembrance of English cricket which died at The Oval, 29th August, 1882. Deeply lamented by a large circle of sorrowing friends and acquaintances, RIP. NB The body will be cremated and the Ashes taken to Australia.”Australia’s first victory on English soil over the full strength of England, on August 29, 1882,inspired a young London journalist, Reginald Shirley Brooks, to write this mock “obituary”. Itappeared in the Sporting Times.Before England’s defeat at The Oval, by seven runs, arrangements had already been made forthe Hon. Ivo Bligh, afterwards Lord Darnley, to lead a team to Australia. Three weeks later theyset out, now with the popular objective of recovering the Ashes. In the event, Australia won thefirst Test by nine wickets, but with England winning the next two it became generally acceptedthat they brought back the Ashes.It was long believed that the real Ashes – a small urn thought to contain the ashes of a bailused in the third match – were presented to Bligh by a group of Melbourne women. In 1998,Lord Darnley’s 82-year-old daughter-in-law said they were the remains of her mother-in-law’s veil,not a bail. Other evidence suggests a ball. The certain origin of the Ashes, therefore, is the subject of some dispute.After Lord Darnley’s death in 1927, the urn was given to MCC by Lord Darnley’s Australian-bornwidow, Florence. It can be seen in the cricket museum at Lord’s, together with a red andgold velvet bag, made specially for it, and the scorecard of the 1882 match.The text on the urn is as follows:-When Ivo goes back with the urn, the urn;
Studds, Steel, Read and Tylecote return, return;
The welkin will ring loud,
The great crowd will feel proud,
Seeing Barlow and Bates with the urn, the urn;
And the rest coming home with the urn.

'Beating India one of our main goals' – Arthur

Mickey Arthur is targeting the top spot next year as well © AFP
 

Mickey Arthur, the South Africa coach, has said that it is important to be No. 1 in the one-day rankings after blanking Bangladesh but added that what his team really wants is to beat India in the three-Test series starting in Chennai on March 26.”We have achieved one of the goals we had set out for the team. And being No. 1 is absolutely great. But it will be better still if we are No. 1 next year too because that would mean we would have beaten Australia in two series,” Arthur told Cricinfo.”We will go all out to win the series in India,” Arthur said. “The Bangladesh win has set us up nicely for the India series. Frankly, we always saw this (Bangladesh) tour as pre-India tour preparation where we got our game and gameplans right for the big one. It’s going to be a fantastic Test series simply because India is a huge team to beat in their own country, and we are not prepared to be just another ordinary rival.”Arthur also spoke of setting high standards for the team, which he admitted will be tested in India. “Not many teams go to India and win, so that’s one of our main goals for the year.”Arthur also said that he has appealed to fast bowler Andre Nel, who was replaced for the India tour by Charl Langeveldt under Cricket South Africa’s transformation policy, to play on for the country. “We have spent a lot of time with him because we believe strongly that he is a vital cog as we go forward, especially against England and Australia who are on our calendar this year. So I hope he decides to stay on with South Africa. But ultimately, it’s his decision because only he knows what’s best for himself.”Nel is believed to be in talks with the unofficial Indian Cricket League (ICL) after being dropped in tune with a CSA selection policy that mandates at least six players of colour in a 14-man squad.South Africa swept the two-Test series against Bangladesh and wrapped up the one-day series 3-0 with a seven-wicket win in Mirpur on Friday. The team will leave Bangladesh on Saturday and is scheduled to fly out from Johannesburg for Chennai on March 21.

Bell and Harmison named in 13-man England squad

Ian Bell has been recalled following his 74 for England A against Pakistan © Getty Images

Ian Bell, the Warwickshire batsman, has earned a recall to the England squad for the first Test against Pakistan at Lord’s on Thursday. Steve Harmison has also been named in a 13-man squad announced this morning which includes five fast bowlers and one spinner, Monty Panesar.”We have included five pace bowlers in the squad, because we need cover for Matthew Hoggard following the hand injury he sustained while with England A yesterday,” David Graveney, England’s chairman of selectors, told BBC Radio Five Live.”Matthew’s injury will be reassessed by our medical staff on Tuesday, and we will give him the maximum time he needs to prove his fitness because he is the most experienced member of our attack,” he added.There was no place for Jamie Dalrymple, however. Dalrymple was the sole bright light for England during their calamitous one-day 5-0 whitewash in the one-day series against Sri Lanka and was their second highest run-scorer. He further enhanced his credentials with a slick performance for England A yesterday where he took 4 for 61 to help dismiss Pakistan for 242, but the selectors have instead opted to attack Pakistan with pace.Bell last played for England against India at Mumbai. Although he was arguably England’s most solid batsmen in the preceding tour of Pakistan, he struggled in India with just one fifty in six innings.Regardless of Hoggard’s availability, there is added pressure on Harmison to return to something resembling his best. He missed the third and final Test against India in the winter, and the Test series against Sri Lanka this summer. Though he returned for the one-day series, his radar was sadly lacking and a worrying 24 wides were sent down.”Yes, without [Andrew Flintoff], there’s a great responsibility on our bowlers,” Graveney said, “so the likes of Harmison and Hoggard, if available, [have a lot of responsibility]. We had a difficult time against Sri Lanka, but we’re looking to change that for Thursday.”England squad:
Andrew Strauss (capt), Marcus Trescothick, Alastair Cook, Kevin Pietersen, Paul Collingwood, Ian Bell, Geraint Jones (wk), Liam Plunkett, Matthew Hoggard, Sajid Mahmood, Steve Harmison, Jon Lewis, Monty Panesar.

North fight back after dismal batting display

East Zone 77 for 4 trail North Zone 178 (Bose 4-45)by 101 runs
Scorecard

North Zone’s bowlers will look to unsettle Sourav Ganguly on day two © Getty Images

Ranadeb Bose took 4 for 45 and Shib Paul 3 for 51 as North Zone were dismissed for 178 after East Zone won the toss and decided to bowl at Rajkot. Despite an accomplished showing by its bowlers, East were unable to drive home the advantage, reaching 77 for 4 at stumps, still 101 runs behind.North were left struggling at 49 for 4 after Bose and Paul each claimed two early wickets. Bose started the proceedings, bowling Shikhar Dhawan for 1, and Paul was quick to join the party, forcing Sangram Singh to edge one to Deep Dasgupta, the wicketkeeper, for 8 with the score on 27. No significant partnerships emerged as both new-ball bowlers applied the pressure.Pankaj Dharmani, the veteran wicketkeeper, made a gritty 35, but wickets continued to tumble at the other end. Yashpal Singh and Sarandeep Singh both fell in the twenties, and with Bose and Paul each striking with the score at 129, North looked in danger of being dismissed for less than 150. A counter-attacking 46 off just 35 balls from Vikram Singh tipped the scales for North, but just slightly.East Zone’s reply did not get off to a good start either, with Gagandeep Singh taking care of Shiv Sunder Das and Arindam Das, the openers, for 0 and 9. With Amit Bhandari taking two wickets as well, East slumped to 59 for 4. Sourav Ganguly, who had taken 2 for 38 earlier in the day, was batting on 19 at close of play.

Brilliant Lara stands alone for West Indies

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

Brian Lara punches the air as he brings up his 27th Test hundred.© Touchline

At the start of this series, there were doubts as to whether Brian Lara would ever play another Test match, as the brouhaha between Cable & Wireless and Digicel reached its crescendo. Today at Trinidad, in front of his home fans, Lara achieved redemption in the manner that only he can, blazing his way to a glorious hundred in his first first-class innings since the tour of England last August.By the close, the majesty of Lara’s performance had been magnified by the shortcomings of his team-mates. Though he himself reached the close on 159 not out, from 236 balls and crowned by 20 thrilling fours, not a single other batsman made more than 35. Thanks to the efforts of Makhaya Ntini with the new ball, and Andre Nel with the old, South Africa chipped away for six wickets, and remained very much in the hunt.Lara had played in just seven one-day internationals since the start of the year, and after the run-feast that a second-string West Indies side served up at Georgetown last week, a lesser mortal might have felt slightly cowed by the weight of expectation on his shoulders, especially when Ntini had reduced West Indies to 14 for 2 after just half-an-hour of the day. Two of Lara’s fellow contract rebels, Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan, had betrayed their lack of match practice with two ill-disciplined strokes, and a third such dismissal would in all probability have opened the floodgates.But there was never any suggestion that Lara would be feeling his way back to form. In the absence of Shaun Pollock, South Africa’s one genuine world-class bowler, the weak links in the South African attack were manifest, and Lara set out to exploit them to the full. Monde Zondeki, whose last Test outing had gleaned six Zimbabwean wickets for 39, was taught a harsh lesson in how to take on a master batsman, while Lara was equally emphatic against the spin of Nicky Boje and the lacklustre pace of Jacques Kallis.He brought up his century by pulling Zondeki for two runs through deep midwicket, and a Trinidad crowd that had steadily grown as word of his derring-do spread erupted in the knowledge that he had overhauled the great Garry Sobers to become West Indies’ leading centurymaker. He now has 27 hundreds to his name, which leaves him someway short of Sachin Tendulkar and Sunil Gavaskar (34), but in this innings he has overhauled both men to become the third-highest run-scorer in Test history.

Chris Gayle prepares to be caught behind, as West Indies stumble early in their innings.© Touchline

Though the opposition was by no means in the same class, the context and quality of his innings was reminiscent of his solo stands against the Australians six seasons ago – the indisputable apex of his career. Then as now, the secret of his success was the partnerships that he was able to form, and in Wavell Hinds, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Courtney Browne, he found three sidekicks who played a fine second-fiddle at crucial stages of the innings.For Hinds and Chanderpaul, it was an emphatic comedown from their heady double-centuries at Georgetown. Hinds was especially watchful – at Bourda he had slapped 34 fours and two sixes in his career-best 213 – but today he knew his role and played it almost to perfection, lasting for 110 deadpan deliveries until Ntini returned to the attack to find his outside edge (108 for 3).For the first half of the day, Ntini had been a lone threat in the South African attack. Nel’s first spell had been short and very wide, while Lara had allowed none of the back-up bowlers to settle. But when Chanderpaul’s composed performance came to a tame end, as he chipped a return catch straight to Boje, South Africa were invigorated. Nel bounded in for a teasing spell of reverse-swing bowling, Donovan Pagon and Dwayne Bravo were both bowled for the addition of 21 runs, and West Indies were in serious danger of squandering all Lara’s good efforts.Nel, whose snarling followthroughs had looked decidedly sheepish in the early part of his performance, suddenly found a second wind, and when Lara was beaten all ends up twice in two balls – a tight lbw shout followed by a fence outside off – Nel punched the air in frustration. But Browne dug in for a vital unbeaten 19, saw off the increasing vagaries in the pitch, and ensured that it was West Indies who reached the close in a position that Lara’s efforts had merited.How they were outWest IndiesChris Gayle c Boucher b Ntini 6 (7 for 1)
Indisciplined swish, steepling edge to keeperRamnaresh Sarwan c Nel b Ntini 5 (13 for 2)
Flapped bouncer to deep fine legWavell Hinds c Smith b Ntini 32 (108 for 3)
Squirted drive to first slipShivnarine Chanderpaul c&b Boje 35 (203 for 4)
Suckered by flighted delivery, simple return catchDonovan Pagon b Ntini 0 (204 for 5)
Played all round straight deliveryDwayne Bravo b Nel 5 (225 for 6)
Reverse swing, inside-edge onto leg stump

South Africa v England, 3rd Test, Cape Town

South Africa 441 (Smith 74, Kallis 149, Boje 76, Flintoff 4-79) and 222 for 8 dec (Kallis 66) beat England 163 (Ntini 4-50, Langeveldt 5-46) and 304 (Pollock 4-65, Boje 4-71) by 196 runs, to level series at 1-1
ScorecardDay 5
Bulletin – South Africa wrap up a convincing victory
Verdict – The rewards of discipline
Smith quotes – In praise of superb South Africa
– Vaughan praises South Africa too
News – England fan charged over racist graffiti
The Big Picture – Jones’s frustration
Day 4
Bulletin – South Africa close in on victory
News – Langeveldt could play in fourth Test
Verdict – A bridge too far
Fletcher quotes – ‘It’s up to individuals to show more patience’
News – Flintoff faces tour KO
The Big Picture – Celebration
Day 3
Bulletin – South Africa turn the screw
Verdict – Sleeping on the job
Giles quotes – ‘I’d like a Test century’
Langeveldt quotes – Happy to be turning the screw
The Big Picture – Kallis Part II
Day 2
Bulletin – South Africa seize the advantage
Verdict – The fulcrum of South Africa’s fortunes
Quotes – Patience was the key – Kallis
News – Langeveldt set to miss rest of the series
Stats – Fastest to 1000 Test runs
The Big Picture – Out the way
Day 1
Bulletin – Kallis still there as South Africa take it slow
Verdict – Potential v perspiration
Roving Reporter – Where better than Newlands at New Year?
Quotes – ‘The guys have done a good job,’ says Fletcher
Quotes – Smith: ‘Kallis is unbelievable’
The Big Picture – Giles’s unexpected hit
Preview Package
Preview – Tearing up the script
News – Pollock cleared to play
The Big Picture – Pitched battle ahead

Harvey, Hodge revive flickering Victorian hopes

Ian Harvey (73*) and Brad Hodge (63*) have led an excellent fightback to rescue Victoria late on day three of the Pura Cup match against Queensland at the Allan Border Field in Brisbane. The pair’s unbroken stand of 133 for the fifth wicket has carried the visitors to a second innings score of 4/216 by stumps, a tally which affords them an overall lead of 118 runs.The memory of Victoria’s disastrous late collapse in its first innings, though, will continue to fire the Bulls’ prospects of claiming outright points at some time tomorrow. Queensland captain Stuart Law admitted as much after play when he indicated that his team unarguably still holds the whip hand in the contest.”They’ve got their backs to the wall and it’s up to them now if they want to salvage something,” he said. “I’m confident of winning.”Before Harvey and Hodge had come together, Queensland’s charge toward outright victory had been ignited by rugged paceman Joe Dawes (4/64). Dawes snared all four of Victoria’s second innings wickets when he spectacularly removed Jason Arnberger (20), Shawn Craig (35), Matthew Mott (19) and Michael Klinger (2) in quick succession in mid-afternoon. Showing all the hunger and passion that might be expected from a player who has been twelfth man for his state almost as many times as he has played, he claimed 4/38 in the space of ten overs at one stage, and also had Craig dropped by Law at second slip.Earlier in the day, Queensland’s first innings had ended at a total of 347. Around a fine spell from Michael Lewis (4/74), the Bulls owed their progression to their ninety-eight run lead largely to the efforts of Wade Seccombe (35), Adam Dale (25) and Andy Bichel (21). Colin Miller (1/93) also bowled well, albeit without producing particularly flattering figures, as he continued to press his claims for Test selection later this month.

USACA objections raise eyebrows

Documents leaked to Cricinfo suggest that far from coming as surprise, the USA Cricket Association were aware of the ICC’s objections to its offered Memorandum of Understanding from the outset. And it also seems that the USACA did make an offer to try to resolve its differences with the ICC.From the off, the USACA expressed concern with the MOU, and Gladstone Dainty, the USACA’s president, wrote to the ICC claiming that it was too restrictive and also that it was "counter to the charter of USACA as a non-profit organization, and has the potential for serious tax consequences and possible criminal consequences."While details of the ICC’s response is not known, at the end of December he again wrote and, referring to letters dated November 1 and December 20, angrily told the ICC that "it is … mischievous and self-serving for the ICC to attempt to interfere with the USACA’s election process. All communication should be directed through USACA . Any other mechanism for communicating …is presumptuous and out of line."Dainty was also increasingly worried by what he viewed as the lack of control was the ICC to follow the course it had proposed. "We are prepared to work with the ICC and any other party in a spirit of cooperation toward the goal of developing the game of cricket in the United States," he said. "However, we are firm that we will not give up our autonomy or cede our responsibility to any others."A reply from Matthew Kennedy, the ICC’s development manager, dismissed Dainty’s objections and, in turn, accused the USACA of being dilatory and obstructive. "Your reply," Kennedy wrote, "causes considerable dissatisfaction and distress to us. We are rapidly reaching the conclusion that Project USA is doomed to failure. ICC would never take any action that would either jeopardise USACA’s tax-exempt status or create any financial or other issues for USACA."With time running out, Dainty seemed to back down a little, acknowledging that "we acknowledge your response that this is not so" on the matter of stripping the USACA of its autonomy. But, still unhappy with the idea that profits from Project USA would head away from the States, he proposed a USA Cricket Development Trust Fund which would be administered by trustees (three from the USACA, two from the ICC) and which would ensure that all income was invested back into in USA cricket. Dainty implied that this idea had been given private backing by the ICC although there is no evidence of this.The suspension of Project USA followed shortly afterwards.What the correspondence makes clear is that Dainty and the board of the USACA were concerned about monies generated by Project USA being taken offshore and possibly used elsewhere. That is strange given that the ICC stated from the off that all funds raised would be invested back into the USA, a position which it has never moved from. The necessary accounting prerequisites were also put in place early on.The suspicion is that the objections being raised owe more to how the money is controlled rather than where it would be spent. The governance issues flagged many times by the ICC show that it is right to want to keep a tight hold of the reins. The worry is that the USACA looks as if it is quite willing to cut off its nose to spite its face.