ECB joins consortium in Centre of Excellence bid

The Management Board of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) decidedtoday to engage with Sport England and the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) inan informal consortium to seek planning permission for the redevelopment offacilities at the Bisham Abbey Sports Centre to enable it to become aCentre of Excellence for both sports.Welcoming the decision, Des Wilson, Chairman of the Sport England LotteryPanel, who has been leading discussions, said: “For some time, we have been exploring ways whereby both major sports can base excellence programmes at Bisham Abbey.”We have now received a major report on some relatively complex planning issues and it’s clear that, for a variety of reasons, this will take longer than we had hoped. Nevertheless, we are advised that there is a reasonable chance of achieving our objectives.”We believe this is best done by working in partnership to develop the project and then promoting the case for it in the national interest. It remains our determination to succeed with the Bisham Abbey project because all three organisations recognise it is the best solution.””In the meantime, Sport England has assured the LTA that their tenancy willcontinue in any event, and we have agreed with the ECB that they undertake afeasibility study into alternative sites in parallel with our planningapplication in order to save time in the possible event that planningpermission is refused.”Savings arising from the delay caused by the planning complexities will help pay the cost of both that study and alternative temporary arrangements for the National Academy, and Sport England will underwrite any reasonable costs.”Hugh Morris, the ECB’s Performance Director, commented: “We still very much hope that the ECB’s National Academy will be set up at Bisham Abbey and believe the combined resources of the three organisations will help overcome the planning difficulties.”But it’s sensible to make contingency plans, and this is why we welcome Sport England’s decision to fund fully a feasibility study into possible alternatives.”In the meantime, we are looking forward enormously to opening the National Academy in Australia this autumn and giving our best young players some top-quality coaching and tremendous all-round experience.”

Gloucestershire triumph despite Dernbach six-for

ScorecardJack Taylor was Man of the Match after scoring 35 of 26 balls and taking three wickets•Getty Images

Gloucestershire claimed their first limited-overs trophy in more than a decade after tightening like a vice during the last third of Surrey’s innings to suffocate the run chase and triumph in a thrilling finish. After losing their talisman, captain Michael Klinger, to the third ball of the match and then being cleaned up for 220 by Jade Dernbach’s hat-trick, this was a remarkable triumph from a Gloucestershire side who refused to give in against seemingly mighty opposition.When Kumar Sangakkara and Rory Burns were compiling a century stand for the third wicket, there was little to trouble Surrey, but spinners Jack Taylor and Tom Smith sparked a dramatic comeback as the shadows lengthened at Lord’s. Only Sam Curran, the youngest player on the pitch in only his seventh List A innings, seemed to possess the required nerve but his poise cruelly deserted him at the end.It came down to seven runs being required off the final over with two wickets standing, after James Burke was run out from the final ball of the penultimate over as Curran tried to steal a single to mid-on. But Curran fell to the next delivery, attempting to hit David Payne over long-on and picking out the fielder.Dernbach, whose 6 for 35 were the third-best figures in a Lord’s final, could only watch from the other end as Gareth Batty then pulled the ball to deep square leg without adding to the total to confirm Gloucestershire’s victory with three deliveries remaining.Fittingly it was Taylor who took the catch. The offspinner, who finished with 3 for 43, also struck a vital 35 from 26 balls in Gloucestershire’s innings to be named Man of the Match.At 143 for 2, Surrey looked as if they would ease to victory, only for Taylor and Smith to turn the screw. The asking rate hovered around a run a ball throughout the last ten overs but wickets fell regularly: Gary Wilson caught at midwicket, Azhar Mahmood stumped, Tom Curran lbw attempting a reverse-sweep – to a ball that may well have missed leg stump.Gloucestershire, playing their first Lord’s final in over a decade, came into the match as underdogs and many feared what would become of them if Klinger failed. Those fears were sharpened when Klinger was dismissed for a duck in Dernbach’s opening over and Gloucestershire required a dogged fifty from another veteran in Geraint Jones, playing in his final match before retirement, to drag them towards respectability.It was hardly an imposing total against a Surrey batting order that has been rampant in this competition, their top three of Jason Roy, Steven Davies and Sangakkara behind only Klinger in the run-scoring list. James Fuller’s hugely impressive opening spell accounted for Roy and Davies but Sangakkara did not offer a chance until mis-hitting a Taylor full toss to mid-on with 78 still needed.On a slow pitch and with what seemed like a majority of the crowd urging them on, Gloucestershire kept themselves in the contest by strangling the scoring. The required rate rose from less than five at the start of the 35th over, before Sangakkara’s dismissal, to more than six as Taylor and Smith wheeled away.It should have been a day to savour for Dernbach – recently described by his captain as “the most complete seamer in England in one-day cricket” – as he became the third man to a hat-trick in a Lord’s final, emulating James Averis and Ken Higgs. After the darkness of 2012, when the death of Tom Maynard had a devastating effect on Dernbach and several of his team-mates, this would have been a cathartic victory.Dernbach’s final wicket came courtesy of an extremely poor umpiring decision but the yorker to clean up Jones after he had reached a 64-ball fifty was a brutally effective piece of death bowling. Craig Miles then inside-edged a drive through to Wilson before umpire Rob Bailey gave last man Payne out lbw after he was hit on the body ducking into a full toss – though replays suggested the ball was missing leg stump by some distance.The 40-year-old Mahmood, only in the side as a seasoned replacement for the injured Zafar Ansari and playing his first List A game in over a year, returned immaculate figures of 2 for 28 from ten overs as Surrey took charge. Gloucestershire only managed one fifty partnership and might have struggled to get past 200 but for the efforts of No. 9 Taylor, which included consecutive leg-side sixes off Tom Curran in the 45th over.Surrey had batted first in every one of their previous Royal London Cup matches this season, winning eight out of nine but this time Batty decided to chase. Maybe it was a psychological ploy: get Klinger in and have a go at him early. The sun was shining and the skies were clear in north London, which is not often the case this late in the season, but still Batty chose to insert on winning the toss. Klinger, the leading run-scorer in the competition and the man many felt was Gloucestershire’s best – even – chance of winning, was offered centre stage.A Lord’s final was once a prime opportunity to persuade the England selectors of a player’s case. Klinger, into his 36th year, still hopes to catch Australia’s attention but this was not to be his moment: attempting to impose himself against Dernbach, he was caught behind forcing a cut. The time it took for Nick Cook’s finger to go up was enough for Gloucestershire hearts to sink into their boots.Surrey had carried out their hit while barely getting their hands dirty; Gloucestershire sensed the wall at their backs already. It seemed like a mortal blow.Victory would be all the sweeter for the manner in which it came but the recovery was slow. Gareth Roderick and Chris Dent put on 40 for the second wicket, the latter dropped when Sam Curran grassed a catch off his own bowling.Dent was on 13 at the time but looked in good touch, only to drill Dernbach straight to mid-off for 22 off 20. Hamish Marshall, one of only two Gloucestershire players with international experience, was next to fall, stumped off a leg-side wide from Batty. His first ball had disappeared down to fine leg for five wides but, an over later, Marshall walked past a similarly errant delivery, beaten by some turn, and Wilson completed a smart bit of work.Mahmood then reeled off ten overs of wicket-to-wicket thriftiness, only slightly blemished when Jones clouted a slower ball beyond the ropes. Benny Howell was bowled through the gate and Roderick played on but Tom Smith combined with Jones to add 52 for the sixth wicket. Taylor then added further impetus but, with 250 still a possibility, he carved a Dernbach full toss to backward point.Gloucestershire needed early wickets and Fuller, bowling in the high 80s mph and making use of a short leg, provided hope by removing both openers inside 12 overs. Roy toe-ended an aggressive swipe to cover while Davies seemed beaten for pace by one that reared back into him and could only play on. Gloucestershire believed but it was much, later until everyone else did.

Dawes four-for takes West Indies under-19s to victory

Scorecard
Jason Dawes, the debutant seamer, with figures of 4 for 25, ripped through the Bangladesh Under-19s’ top order, as West Indies Under-19s claimed a 73-run win in the second ODI in Savar.Chasing 186 to win off 43 overs in a rain-curtailed match, Bangladesh lost opener Saikat Ali and Nadimuddin leg before in successive overs by Dawes. Nasir Hossain and Mithun Ali added 20 before Dawes struck twice again; Hossain was caught by Veerasammy Permaul, while two balls later, Rony Talukder fell for a duck. Bangladesh were in trouble at 36 for 4, and were never in the hunt from then on.Spin, which was introduced in the 12th over, reaped immediate rewards when Steven Jacobs bowled Ali for 17, and Suhrawadi Shuvo in consecutive overs. Mahmudul Hasan, the No. 6 batman, attempted a brief rearguard act with 30 off 48 balls, but he fell to the legspin of Sharmarh Brooks, who added two more wickets to his tally as Bangladesh were dismissed for a paltry 112.Earlier, West Indies rode on a patient 103-ball 66 from Horace Miller, the left-handed opening batsman. West Indies lost Adrian Barath and Kieron Powell to medium-pacer Dolar Mahmud for the addition of only seven runs, before Miller and Darren Bravo, the brother of West Indies allrounder Dwayne, added exactly 50 for the third wicket. After Bravo was run out for 55, Miller soon brought up his half-century during a 55-run fourth-wicket stand with Brooks.But West Indies lost the duo in quick succession; Brooks falling to offspinner Mohammad Shakil for 22, while Miller was run out by Talukder. West Indies, were in a spot of bother at 132 for 5, but their tail could not get going, with Mahmud finishing with figures of 4 for 26.

Ponting fitness boost for injury-hit Aussies

Ricky Ponting: ‘It’s been about a week and the last few nights I’ve slept a lot better’ © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting has given his struggling side a boost by expecting to be fully fit and pain-free when he arrives in the Caribbean next week. Ponting, who missed the 3-0 thumping at the hands of New Zealand with back trouble, had three cortisone injections to reduce inflammation caused by bone spurs in his spine, but said much of the pain had eased.”My back’s fine,” Ponting told a business luncheon in Sydney. “[The doctors] said on the day that I had the injections it would be three to four days of not doing much before the injection settles down.”It’s been about a week and the last few nights I’ve slept a lot better and felt a lot better in the morning. Hopefully, when I get to the West Indies I’ll be pain-free and ready to go.”He also said Australia may consider batting second at the World Cup after they conceded the four greatest run-chases in limited-overs history during the past 14 months. “We’re going to come up against some small grounds in the World Cup, so the consideration of batting second is something there to think about,” Ponting said. “That straight away eases a bit of the pressure on the bowlers.”Ponting said much of the aura surrounding Australian cricket had diminished following five consecutive losses. “I think it will have an affect on the other teams, they’ll say, ‘hang on England just beat Australia in the finals, New Zealand just beat Australia 3-0, why can’t we beat them’,” Ponting told the audience. “Other teams around the world will be thinking Australia are beatable now, where only a few weeks ago everybody was wondering how any other team in the world was going to compete with us.”Ponting later told reporters: “I don’t think the team’s in any dire straits at the moment. We’ve had a few injuries and lost a few guys, but I’m pretty confident that we’ll be ultra competitive in every game we play.”He said he felt good enough to play a round of golf last Friday, reportedly on the advice of back specialists, who claimed swinging a club would help maintain movement while not aggravating the inflamed area. There are five Australians struggling with injuries three weeks out from their World Cup defence, but Ponting and fellow batsman Michael Clarke (hip) are the two players giving least concern.The opener Matthew Hayden has been told to rest for up to three weeks to recover from the fractured big toe suffered while scoring an Australian-record 181 not out against New Zealand on Tuesday. Andrew Symonds remains in doubt, but he believes he is making good progress from shoulder surgery.Brett Lee is the biggest worry, with Cricket Australia sending him for scans on Friday and they will be reviewed over the weekend. The selectors will make a ruling on Lee’s fitness before Australia fly for the Caribbean next week. Lee said last week he had only a 50-50 chance of playing in the World Cup after damaging ankle ligaments during training.

Harmony restored within Bangladesh board

Ali Asghar, the Bangladesh Cricket Board president, welcomed back Reazuddin Al Mamun to the board. © Getty Images

Despite resigning from his post of joint secretary and media committee chairman only three months ago, Reazuddin Al Mamun was reinstated by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) after a long executive meeting on Saturday.It was a grim-looking Mamun who arrived for the meeting half-an-hour after it started, but he was all smiles when he later emerged with Ali Asghar, the board president, beside him.”There was no seat reserved for me in the room but I was not surprised,” said Mamun. “I came here to say goodbye to everybody and explain my position on why I tendered my resignation. And all of my colleagues didn’t want me to quit. But I have decided to stay only when the president showed the letter that there was no further relation with Aston Moore.”The current crisis began in October when rumours circulated that Asghar had made a secret TV and sponsorship deal with Aston Moore, the BCB’s marketing company. That led to Mamun’s resignation. After Saturday’s meeting, the board insisted that there were no such media links with Aston Moore.Mahbubul Anam, the BCB’s general secretary, was apologetic over a number of issues that had not been addressed before now. Mahbubul, who like his president came under severe criticism for failing to convene a meeting within the stipulated time and the confusion over Mamun’s invitation, admitted that they failed to run the show properly in last few months that even led to the breach of constitution.”As per constitution we are bound to hold at least one meeting in every three months but unfortunately we failed to meet the deadline for the third meeting,” he told reporters. “We concede that it was our administrative failure. But thankfully the members have accepted our excuse and we promise that it would not happen in future.”

The meeting also approved the upcoming home matches against Kenya. The Africans will arrive here on March 10 to play three to four ODIs if Zimbabwe do not come for the triangular series Mahbubul Anam

He also revealed that a five-member committee involving the president, general secretary, chairman of marketing committee, chairman of media committee and chairman of finance committee will now look into the future TV deal. Mahbubul also said that the meeting dissolved all the present standing committees in an effort to start afresh with more dynamic ones.”Since we wanted to start from the scratch we have dissolved the sub-committees and formed a seven-member body involving Aziz Al Kaiser Titoo, general secretary, two joint secretaries, Khondokar Jamiluddin, Shaheen Aftabur Reza and Asaduzzaman Kahinoor. The committees will submit the names within 48 hours for approval of the board. We have already short-listed the candidates from five to two and we are expecting to make a final decision within two days.”The meeting also approved the upcoming home matches against Kenya. The Africans will arrive here on March 10 to play three to four ODIs if Zimbabwe do not come for the triangular series.”

Lloyd accuses Vaughan of being 'rude and dismissive'

Clive Lloyd is not a happy man© Getty Images

Clive Lloyd, the former West Indian captain and current match referee, has accused Michael Vaughan of being “rude and dismissive” during the disciplinary hearing that resulted in Vaughan being fined his entire match fee during the fourth Test at Johannesburg.Reuters quoted Lloyd as telling a South African newspaper, “I would have given him a lesser fine if it were not for that, but I stopped short of banning him for the last Test. I have respect for the England captain and I expected the same from him.”Vaughan had criticised the two on-field umpires, Aleem Dar and Steve Bucknor, for the “inconsistent” way they handled the issue of bad light during the Test. Vaughan was then fined his full match fee of approximately £5500 (US$10,350).”If he doesn’t respect me he should at least respect the position [of match referee],” said Lloyd. “But he made matters worse for himself with his dismissive and rude attitude.”There was an immediate response from the English Professional Cricketers’ Association, which called on the ICC to remove Lloyd from its list of referees for making the matter public. A PCA statement read: “Putting details into the media is unacceptable and should lead to an immediate review of Clive Lloyd’s position and future as a match referee.”

Security tight as New Zealand arrive in Lahore

High security as the New Zealand squad arrives in Lahore
© AFP

After weeks or will-they, won’t-they, a weakened New Zealand team finally arrived in Lahore for the start of their short tour of Pakistan.The trip, scheduled as compensation following the abandonment of New Zealand’s 2002 tour after a bomb blast in Karachi, gets underway with back-to-back day-night matches at Lahore on Saturday and Monday, with five games in all. Faisalabad hosts the third match on December 3 before the series ends at Rawaplindi on December 5 and 7.There were several high-profile absences in the squad, with four players – Ian Butler, Craig McMillan, Scot Styris and Lou Vincent – withdrawing after receiving anonymous e-mail threats a fortnight ago. Stephen Fleming pulled out after failing to recover from an abdominal injury.The arrival was low-key with the tour party quickly ushered through the airport and onto their hotel, all the time accompanied by a large number of police and army commandos.”We will provide the New Zealand team with full-fledged security,” insisted Adnan Bokhari, the sub-inspector of the Lahore police. “They are our distinguished guests and the security is just like that we usually give to any head of state.” Bokhari added that 2000 police and 150 commandos had been allocated to provide security for the New Zealanders.

It's all about baking the cake first before icing it

New Zealand needs its bottom five or six batsmen to ice the cake, not bake it, captain Stephen Fleming said last night after the 33-run loss to England that squared the National Bank Series 2-2.That was a clear reference to another failure by the top order players to establish themselves and to dissect the bowling of Darren Gough, Matthew Hoggard and Andrew Flintoff for the second time in the series.Again the partnership building was done by England, especially Michael Vaughan and Graham Thorpe in their 89-run, 87 ball stand which placed them in such a strong position when it rained during their innings.Fleming had no problems with the desire of local officials to see the match cleaned up last night by use of the Duckworth/Lewis system instead of coming back tomorrow to play the game.”We’re in the entertainment business and we have a full house and there is a responsibility to provide entertainment. I would certainly prefer to play a limited overs match in front of 36,000 people than 10,000 tomorrow,” he said.The system had been discussed many times, but Fleming said the bottom line had been that New Zealand had been set a target and they didn’t chase it very well.”We saw the target and saw it was quite healthy so we had to create the strike rate. There was a level of risk that was increased and the result was that it bordered on recklessness at times.”The intent to create a strike rate was there, we faced some good bowling at the outset and we just played our shots at the wrong time,” Fleming said.The series was set up well for the finale in Dunedin and Fleming said the results had almost mirrored themselves.”We had our week last week, they had their week this week,” he said.The momentum was now with England.The New Zealand top order was only sparking on one cylinder instead of four or five and that was what was needed to win.”The series is something we desperately want and we tend to play our best cricket when we are desperate. Perhaps we are not used to being in the comfort zone when we are 2-0 up.”New Zealand would not be painting over the flaws in their approach and they would be making full use of the two days of practice they have in Dunedin to put everything into winning on Tuesday.

Mumbai peg Delhi on the backfoot

Delhi U-16 failed to capitalise on a fine 159 run opening stand to endthe second day at 206 for 4 in their quarterfinal match against MumbaiU-16 at the East Calcutta District Sports Council Ground in Kolkata onSunday in the Vijay Merchant Trophy.Replying to Mumbai’s 328, Delhi were given a solid start by openersPritpal Singh (77) and Shikar Dhawan (68) adding 159 runs in 48.2overs. Pritpal was the first to reach his half century in 103 balls.He was also the first to be dismissed, trapped leg before by G Yadav.During a 202 minute stay at the crease, Pritpal faced 120 balls andhit eleven fours. Then the new batsman H Khullar returned to thepavilion the very next ball bowled by G Yadav.With only fifteen more runs being added to the total, S Dhawan was runout. Dhawan in his 215 minute stay at the centre, faced 148 balls andfound the boundary ropes nine times. G Yadav then came back to dismissA Bali (5), stumped by PC Mayekar, to restrict Delhi to 170 for 4. Atstumps, H Mehta (19) and K Rawat (20) were at the crease.Earlier in the morning, resuming at the overnight score of 278 for 8,Mumbai were all out for 328. Yadav who remained unbeaten the previousevening was caught by A Nag off A Jain. The last basman V Yelligattiwas unable to open his account and after facing nine balls was bowledby Sumit Kapoor.

Amit Majumder included in Bangladesh U-19s squad

Bangladesh have announced their squad for the Under-19s World Cup in February, adding batsman Amit Majumder to the squad which completed a tour of South Africa this month.Bangladesh U-19s returned from South Africa where they drew the two-Test series 0-0. They qualified for the final for the tri-nation tournament that followed, including South Africa U-19s and India U-19s, but lost to India by 137 runs.Bangladesh U-19s will host Nepal U-19s, who arrive on January 22, for a week-long tour in the lead-up to the World Cup. All three one-day matches will be played in Khulna. The West Indies U-19s will visit after Nepal for four one-day matches, three of which will be held at the Shaheed Chandu Stadium (SCS) in Bogra and the other at the Fatullah Cricket Stadium.The World Cup begins on February 17 in Malaysia with the final on March 2 at the Kinrara Academy Oval in Kuala Lumpur.Squad: Suhrawadi Shuvo (captain), Dolar Mahmud, Marshall Ayub, Subashis Roy, Rubel Hossain, Golam Kibria, Rony Talukder, Mahmudul Hasan, Nasir Hossain, Mohammad Shakil, Nadimuddin, Mithun Ali, Saikat Ali, Amit Majumder, Ashiqul Islam

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