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On the shoulders of giants

Sachin Tendulkar against all bowlers – India innings at Trinidad
© CricInfo

An army may well win a battle with pop-guns and catapults, buthow much less concerned the soldiers and their supporters wouldfeel if their tank – even one with ailing treads – were rolledout to back up the infantry. Allegorically, Sachin Tendulkar putteam interests before his shoulder bursitis – tendon inflammation- and slipped into one-day colours for the deciding one-dayinternational at Port of Spain.As it turned out, Tendulkar scooped his 44th Man of the Matchaward by hitting a crucial 65 off 70 balls and guiding India to achallenging total of 260. But the innings itself could hardly betermed vintage Tendulkar, and his sore shoulder takes primeresponsibility for the nature of the knock.Tendulkar’s MRF-emblazoned bludgeon, treading the line between”bat” and “lethal weapon” ever so delicately, weighs almostthree pounds, making it difficult to hoist into position with apainful shoulder. Accordingly, his innings was almost completelydevoid of his pet horizontal-bat shots – the cut and the pull.Six runs came in front of point and six in the square-leg region,both areas that would have been thicker in run-density ifTendulkar had the freedom to unleash the full flourish of his baton his shots. Instead, Tendulkar adapted his game to move the batas little as possible. He glided 14 runs to third man and as manyas 18 to fine-leg. Eleven runs came in the mid-wicket region,mostly from effortless nudges off his legs.At the post-match press conference, Tendulkar admitted that hisshoulder hampered him. “There were some shots that I justcouldn’t play,” he said. “My shoulder is still a little stiff, alittle sore, but I’ve been told it’s nothing serious. It shouldbe okay in the next five-six days; it’s just an inflammation.”Under such circumstances, Tendulkar’s knock was all the morepriceless, as much for its contribution to the win as for thesheer effort and dedication it exemplified.

South Zone post healthy score on opening day

Contrary to the manner in which their senior team caved in against EastZone in the just concluded Duleep Trophy match at Agartala, the South ZoneUnder-19 side had a comfortable opening day against Central Zone in thethree day CK Nayudu Trophy final at the Barabati Stadium in Cuttack onSunday. At stumps, South Zone were a healthy 303 for 6 with the Andhramiddle order batsman ASK Varma (72) and Karnataka all rounder DeepakChougule (61) leading the way.Opting to bat, South openers TS Suman (59) and stumper Tahir Hussain (34)put on 56 runs off 13.3 overs. Tahir was the first to be dismissed when hewas caught behind by Amit Deshpande off Chandrashekar Atram. This broughtChougule to the crease and he and Suman took the score to 103. Suman wasthe next to return to the confines of the pavilion, trapped leg before by SUpadhyaya. During his 114-minute stay at the crease, Suman faced 68 ballsand hit seven fours.The fall of Suman ushered in the South Zone skipper, Arjun Yadav (26) tothe middle. Chougule and Yadav added 54 runs for the third wicket beforethe captain was caught by the substitute fielder Jitender Singh off NChoudhury. With the scoreboard reading 193, Chougule himself perished to acatch by A Kapoor off Atram. During a 148-minute stay at the crease,Chougule faced 120 balls and hit eight fours and one six.ASK Varma then forged a 63-run fifth wicket stand with Stuart Binny (24).Binny was the next batsman to be dismissed, caught by Jitender Singh offUpadhyaya. Varma. who had by then crossed his half century, was motoringalong smoothly. But in the 75th over of the day, he was sent back to thepavilion, caught behind by Deshpande off Upadhyaya. Vijay Sai Suri (12)and Mohd Faiq (5) took the team to stumps with no further casualities. SUpadhyaya was the most successful bowler with figures of 3 for 59.

Dale awarded a Benefit in 2002

Glamorgan County Cricket Club have awarded a Benefit in 2002 to Adrian Dale, the county’s vice captain.Dale, 32, made his Glamorgan debut in 1989, was capped in 1992, and has since scored close to 10,000 first class runs for the Welsh county and taken nearly 200 wickets for the county, being a key member of the Club’s Championship-winning side in 1997. He has also played in over 250 one-day matches for Glamorgan, helping the team win the AXA Equity and Law League title in 1993 and to reach the Benson and Hedges Cup Final last June. He toured South Africa with England ‘A’ in 1993/94 and was appointed Glamorgan Vice Captain during last winter, leading the side in Steve James’s absence for the opening two games of this season.”It doesn’t seem too long ago that I was starting out at Glamorgan, but throughout my playing career I’ve been fortunate not only to have played with some fine cricketers and experienced some real highs with the team but to have made some great friends along the way. I know that Benefit years can be difficult for players but I have an excellent Benefit Chairman in HowardGadd and it’s a challenge I shall look forward to with some relish. I’ve been privileged to play for Glamorgan and I am absolutely delighted to have been awarded a Benefit. I’m very grateful indeed to the Committee for granting it to me.”Glamorgan Chairman Gerard Elias QC said: “Adrian Dale has been a cornerstone of the Glamorgan side in all forms of cricket since he made his debut twelve seasons ago and he has been one of our most reliable players throughout his career with us. Indeed, through the work he has undertaken in our marketing department these last two winters he has proved himself thoroughlycommitted to Glamorgan off the field as well, working hard to promote the Club in any way possible. Adrian thoroughly merits the award of a Benefit, which the Committee had no hesitation in granting. He’s been a fine cricketer for Glamorgan, enjoying a number of personal and team highlights, and we hope the public in Wales will take the opportunity to show their appreciation next year.”

BPL 2013 to kick off on January 17

The second edition of the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) is set to begin on January 17 next year, the Bangladesh Cricket Board has confirmed. The inaugural edition, played from February 10 to February 29, 2012, was won by Dhaka Gladiators.The franchise auction will be held on November 9 this year, and the players’ auction will follow it, on December 7.Apart from the Shere Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur and the MA Aziz Stadium in Chittagong, the Sheikh Abu Naser Stadium in Khulna will host BPL matches. Two more stadiums – the Sylhet Divisional Stadium and the Shahid Kamaruzzaman Stadium in Rajshahi – will host the warm-up games.There would be three categories of players to be auctioned. ‘Golden’ category players would have a base price of US$75,000, the foreign cricketers would have base prices ranging from $50,000 to $15,000, and the local players will have base prices ranging from $30,000 to $10,000.The second edition of the BPL will be without icon players. Shahriar Nafees, Tamim Iqbal, Mohammad Ashraful, Shakib Al Hasan, Mushfiqur Rahim and Alok Kapali were the icon players in the 2012 BPL.

Willey looks to build on T20 exploits

David Willey is already Northamptonshire’s answer to Ian Botham but he is not done there – he has already set his sights on the international stage.That might sound like a bold claim for a man who rocketed into the public consciousness for the first time last summer with his exploits on Friends Life t20 finals day.But after a call-up to the England Performance Programme for the winter tour of Australia, Willey, at 23, is now firmly on Andy Flower’s radar. The squad depart for Perth on Thursday.Until his impressive summer with the ball in 2012, the most famous cricketing Willey incontestably remained his father, Peter, who has followed up 26 Tests for England with more than 20 years as one of the sternest umpires on the circuit.But David’s all-round display on finals day at Edgbaston in August cemented him as a star on the rise: Willey took Surrey for a 19-ball half-century, the fastest of the season, pulled off a direct-hit run-out from the deep and finished off the match with a hat-trick as part of a four-wicket haul. It all assured him of the PCA award as the most valuable player of the season in t20.While the left-armer is quick to admit that days like that probably only come around once in a career, with a Performance Programme tour to look forward to, Willey is confident the foundations are in place for him to end the long search for England’s next allrounder.”I probably won’t have another game like that in my whole career,” he admitted. “But hopefully the summer and the EPP call up is a step in the right direction and I can use it as a catalyst to kick on for the rest of my career.”I think in all formats I would like to see myself as a genuine allrounder. Throw in the fact that I like to think I am a good fielder as well and I hope I can be an all-round player who is important in any format.”I like to think of myself as a bit of an action man, I like to be involved and contribute in all three aspects of the game and I hope in the selectors’ eyes that can only be a good thing. I definitely look at my skill set and think that the England all-rounder is a position I would like to make my own.”I’m not denying that I am not the finished article yet and I have got areas to work on, but I will keep working on all aspects of my game so that I can put myself in the picture.”Willey is part of a 16-man EPP squad and among the 13 heading to Australia this month, swiftly following on from his appearances for the Lions against Bangladesh A in August.England’s much-vaunted programme has seen two recent graduates, Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow, go on to establish themselves in the senior set-up with a third Yorkshire batsman, Gary Ballance, hot on their heels.Willey is anxious for his career to be kicked ahead in similar fashion. “With the EPP are some of the best coaches so it’s the best place to progress and work on things,” he said. “Hopefully, there is a lot for us to work on and we can get stuck in and make a good progression.”On the bowling side I want to work a bit on my action, making it a bit more economical to hopefully prevent some injuries, and I also want to try and work on a genuine awayswinger to the right hander. Then on the batting side it is about drawing up a game plan so I can bat for whole days: that’s how you score the big runs.”You can see from the past record of this programme that it is one of the best, if not the best, in the world for bringing players on, so to be a part of it is fantastic.Follow the England Performance Programme squad and their progress this winter at www.ecb.co.uk/epp

Smith appointed Leicestershire first team coach

Leicestershire, reeling from an awful season, have reorganised their coaching set-up in a bid to find improvement.For the first time in the club’s history, the team failed to win a first-class game all season – they lost to Leeds-Bradford MCCU, too – and recorded the lowest points tally (79) by any team since the introduction of two divisions in the County Championship. They finished 70 points adrift of the rest at the bottom of Division Two.As a result Phil Whitticase, who was previously known as the head coach, has been named as director of cricket, while Ben Smith is now the senior coach with responsibility for the first team. Lloyd Tennant has been appointed as senior coach with responsibility for the 2nd XI.”The club felt that with all the responsibilities I had to deal with there was a need to realign and have a clear focus to the requirements of the team,” Whitticase said. “This has been achieved by restructuring the roles of the coaches and I believe this will be in the best interest of the club.”The club raised some eyebrows when its chairmen, Paul Heywood, sent out a message to members towards the end of the season. Among some genuinely encouraging items of news – such as the club having secured a tour game against India in 2014 and expressing confidence that they would hit their financial budgets – he included the more prosaic item: an ice cream trolley has been purchased so ice cream is now available at every match.While Leicestershire supporters will, no doubt, he delighted to hear that, they may be more interested in how the club can improve on the pitch and how they can keep hold of a clutch of their better players – the likes of Ned Eckersley, Josh Cobb and Shiv Thakor – when their contracts expire.

Chand century builds strong total for North

A full day’s play was possible in Kochi after the rain-hit first day of the Duleep Trophy semi-final and Unmukt Chand made the most of it, hitting his third first-class hundred. North Zone resumed on 33 for 0 against East Zone and reached 329 for 2 by stumps, openers Jiwanjot Singh and Chand the men to be dismissed.While Jiwanjot could not make the most of a patient start and fell to Ashok Dinda for 24, Chand kicked on to make 116. He added 187 for the second wicket with Jammu & Kashmir batsman Ian Dev Singh, who had to retire hurt five runs short of what would have been his seventh first-class hundred. Mandeep Singh (40*) and Services batsman Rajat Paliwal (41*) ensured no further damage for North with an unbroken 81-run stand.South Zone captain Abhinav Mukund led his side to a strong position against Central Zone in the other semi-final in Chennai. Mukund was unbeaten on 61 with B Aparajith giving him company on 35 as South reached 137 for 2 in reply to Central’s 209. The visitors resumed in the morning at 123 for 5 and only captain Piyush Chawla put up some resistance. He hit three sixes on his way to 56 before falling to Pragyan Ojha, who ended with 3 for 49.South started steadily but Akshath Reddy and KL Rahul failed to kick on from starts, falling to Chawla and Umesh Yadav respectively. Mukund was joined by Aparajith at 73 for 2 and by stumps, the partnership had grown to 64.

Masakadza sets up shock win for Zimbabwe

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsHamilton Masakadza ensured Zimbabwe held the edge with 85•AFP

The last time Zimbabwe beat Pakistan in any format was 15 years ago. Back then, Pakistan lost to arguably the most formidable Zimbabwe side in history – one that was capable of standing up to the best international sides. With the cricketing climate in the country having undergone a drastic change since then, any victory by current setup against a top side will be remembered for long. Coming off a disappointing T20 series, where Zimbabwe failed to figure out how to close out a chase, they held their composure and applied themselves better despite the short turnaround time.A strong opening stand of 107 between Vusi Sibanda and Hamilton Masakadza was the bedrock in their chase of 245. Having dealt with the seamers with ease during the T20s, Zimbabwe’s chances of victory hung on how they would perform outside their comfort zone. They looked ill at ease against the spin trio in the T20s but crucially, this time, they didn’t let the spinners run away with the advantage. Saeed Ajmal managed to strike, but the long interval between breakthroughs meant that Pakistan were always playing catch-up. In the closing stages, Pakistan had created enough pressure to bring the equation down to a run-a-ball, but a combination of poor fielding and freakish luck meant that it was Zimbabwe’s day.Before this match, Masakadza spoke about the importance of his duty, as an opener, to set the base and not allow pressure to build on the lower order. Back at the top, a position he is comfortable with, and with an opening partner from school days, Masakadza took the initiative by hammering Junaid Khan for three boundaries in an over. The openers were strong through the off side against the left-armers and the boundary barrage prompted captain Misbah-ul-Haq to bring in spin from both ends from the eighth over.The spinners managed to keep the runs down but wickets eluded them. Misbah used all five bowlers by the end of 12 overs and the breakthrough finally came in the 24th, when Sibanda stayed back to an Ajmal ball that spun back in. Masakadza reached his fifty the following over and continued to take on the spinners, sweeping Ajmal and reading Shahid Afridi’s variations. He chipped down the track and lofted Afridi over extra cover for six in an over that produced 13. The frustration showed in Pakistan’s fielding, when in that over, a drive back to the bowler which should have been stopped resulted in two runs.Masakadza fell during the batting Powerplay, smashing Ajmal straight to cover. It was only temporary relief for Pakistan because by then Taylor was set, having already hit four boundaries. Pakistan didn’t do themselves any favours in the field, though. A struggling Timycen Maruma tried to loft over long-on but Ahmed Shehzad was in two minds whether to catch or stop the ball and the ball bounced over his head for four. Taylor himself was let-off, on 37, when a reverse sweep went straight to point where Junaid dropped it.Luck was firmly in Zimbabwe’s favour. Maruma’s wobbly knock suggested that Zimbabwe were starting to panic, but Sean Williams, aided by some good fortune, ensured his side held the edge with a spicy cameo. An inside edge off Junaid hit the base of the stumps but miraculously, didn’t dislodge the bails. Worse still for Pakistan, it went for four. Williams sealed the win in style, smashing a six over midwicket to give Zimbabwe their first ODI win against a top team since October 2011.Pakistan, winning the toss, found runs hard to come by at the start due to steady seam bowling, recovered in the middle thanks to Mohammad Hafeez’s brisk half-century, and stumbled towards the end, failing to accelerate due to the pressure caused by the sudden fall of wickets. What prevented them from suffering a complete meltdown was Misbah-ul-Haq, who carried on his good form from the West Indies with his fourth consecutive fifty.It was a mixed day for Zimbabwe in the field. A series of drops at the start showed that the team had hardly made any progress on that front since the India tour. Mohammad Hafeez was a beneficiary of one of those drops, when on 10. He went on to score 70, but the pace of his innings was crucial, with Misbah not deviating from his tried and tested conservative approach in the middle overs.Hafeez found early momentum with three sixes off Prosper Utseya, down the ground, though he was lucky the second one wasn’t pouched at the boundary’s edge. Hafeez was strong through the off side, punishing the offspinners in particular. He picked 48 of his 70 runs off Utseya and Malcolm Waller, picking the large gaps square of the wicket on the off side.Pakistan struggled to maintain a healthy run-rate following that wicket. Umar Amin was run-out trying to complete a second run. Afridi played a typical blink-and-you-missed-it cameo before edging a slog. Haris Sohail was caught brilliantly by Utseya, who plucked a one-handed blinder at short cover – a catch good enough to forget the sitters put down earlier by Zimbabwe.Misbah’s innings had a high percentage of singles – he had scored only two fours till the 46th over, and yet had managed a decent strike-rate of 81.69. Yet, he saved his big hitting only for the final over, mowing Tinashe Panyangara for massive blows over the on side to take Pakistan to 244. It was well short of stretching the hosts, who are a win away from sealing the series.

England forced to grind as Australia chip away

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsKevin Pietersen struggled to flourish on a slow wicket but made a valuable half-century•Getty Images

Capacity crowds have been drawn to the Investec Ashes all summer in anticipation of another high-octane series, but sometimes things do not work out that way. Instead, England are juddering to their final destination as if Australia have slipped petrol into their diesel engine.When England are under pressure, they commit themselves zealously to pre-programmed, conservative, risk-free cricket. There will be a computer programme somewhere suggesting that the careworn approach they displayed on the third day of the Oval Test has improved their victory chances by 5.62% and their chances of avoiding defeat by rather more.Their give-’em-nothing approach probably possessed unabashed cricketing logic and provided further proof of their tough mental state. They were 3-0 up in the series and were determined not to grant Australia a consolation victory with the return series already looming. Faster scoring, according to Joe Root, young in years but old in brain, was “not viable”. The result was drab fare for all but the most obsessive Test cricket watcher.Excited England pre-match talk of an unprecedented 4-0 Ashes victory was quietened on the first day by a lost toss and Shane Watson’s domineering century for Australia. What has followed has been prosaic in the extreme: attritional batting, laggardly attitudes which might usefully waste a bit of time along the way, and a general tedium as England have made grim, and probably successful, progress towards passing the follow-on figure of 293.They scored at only 2.19 runs per over on the third day, making 215 in 98 overs, while losing only three wickets on a ponderous but reliable Oval surface, one on which Australia proceeded at 3.81 runs per over while making 492. But Australia had to make the running and that meant taking wickets. They failed in their prime task.Australia’s attack was disciplined but – as England emphasised, hour after long hour – resistible: Nathan Lyon, barely seen until mid-afternoon, got the occasional ball to turn and bounce sharply and, if Ryan Harris ever opts for body art, a huge bull nose ring would be perfect; for his unyielding approach alone, he deserves to be named as Australia’s man of the series. But England’s obduracy triumphed and it arose not from conditions but largely from their choice to put an unwillingness to yield above loftier ambitions.Perhaps the presence of a debutant allrounder, Chris Woakes, at No. 6, was enough to curb England’s ambitions. As it was, Woakes, although only 15 not out at the close, launched his Test career with a ringing square drive against Mitchell Starc and generally looked more comfortable than most. If he has a Test future it may be as a batting allrounder.Even the umpires caught the slow rhythms. Aleem Dar thought for an age before giving out Jonathan Trott to Australia’s first delivery with the second new ball, ten minutes before tea. Trott, who had reached 40 with great deliberation, while bearing the demeanour of a cabinet minister who had just approached the despatch box to announce the banning of Fun, reviewed Starc’s lbw decision but the call was a good one. Australia had stifled his leg-side strength to good effect.Alastair Cook’s unproductive Ashes continued when he became the only England batsman to fall on the third morning. Cook’s exceptional record – 766 runs in seven innings – was the bedrock of England’s first series win in Australia for 24 years three years ago, and he has another series victory to bring contentment here, but he has found little personal glory in his first home series as an Ashes captain.When Harris enticed him to push woodenly at a wide one, and offer a simple catch to the wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, it left him with 243 runs at an average of 27 and the prospect of one more innings, at best, to remedy matters.As for Haddin, he is only two dismissals short of Rod Marsh’s all-time record of 28 dismissals in a Test series, achieved against England in 1982-83, which is not the sort of statistic you expect to find when a side is 3-0 down.Cook has three half-centuries in the series, but his batting for the most part has been characterised by stilted defence. His 28 came from 88 balls, with only 11 added from his overnight total, his pleasure drawn from a solitary square drive against Harris and the only half-century stand that his new opening alliance with Root has brought all summer.He also survived an Australia review, on 25, when Harris exposed his summer-long tendency to fall too far over to the off side. But it is doubtful whether he was overly concerned. Predictably, replays showed the ball pitching well outside leg stump, continuing the trend in a series in which the DRS success rate of both sides now lies under 25%.Root did at least find some benefit. Remove his herculean 180 in the second Test at Lord’s and all he had to show for his first series as an opener was six scores under 20, but he survived an awkward examination from Starc in particular and by the time he unpacked his first third-man glide of the morning he looked in better order. His half-century was neatly packed away by lunch.James Faulkner, like Woakes, is a one-day allrounder on Test debut, and his introduction after lunch encouraged Root’s most enterprising moments as he twice preyed on width to drive to the boundary. But expectations that Root could inject some life into the day were dashed by Lyon, who had him caught at short fine-leg from a top-edged sweep.Kevin Pietersen was awarded a miniature silver bat at lunchtime as recognition of becoming England’s highest runscorer in international cricket, but it brought no air of celebration. His fifty took three hours, his second slowest in Tests for England, and came up with a bottom-edged pull against Faulkner as he was through a pull shot far too early. Ironic cheers rang out from a crowd which had soaked up its punishment patiently.He has rarely made such ugly runs and did not make another run after his half-century, poking a full-length ball from Starc to first slip. There had not been a strut in sight. There was, though, a prolonged exchange with Michael Clarke after he was sledged for the way he apparently mothers Ian Bell through an innings when they are together at the crease.Pietersen had most difficulties of all against Lyon, who found turn from around the wicket and enough harum-scarum moments against bat and pad to keep the short leg, Steve Smith, in perpetual hope that a deflection might fall within his range. His impatience was apparent when he gambled on a risky single to mid-on and was spared by David Warner’s inaccurate shy. Lyon caused occasional alarms, but he could not cause mayhem.Were it not for forecasts of heavy rain, spinners could be expected to have a sizeable say on the last two days. Instead, with storms forecast for Saturday, there was a sense of a series meandering to a climax, a series which has sporadically brought great entertainment, but which has been of inconsistent quality.Roy Hodgson, the England football manager, was in the crowd and, in his terminology, he must have felt that the third day remained goalless, with only a couple of shots on target.

Mubarak, bowlers engineer Ruhuna win

ScorecardA silken 18-ball 36 from Mahela Jayawardene and a half-century from Dinesh Chandimal was not enough to keep Uthura Yellows in the hunt for a final spot, as Ruhuna Reds defended an impressive total to win by 21 runs. No team has yet won batting second in the tournament, and chasing Ruhuna’s 162 for 6 on a wearing pitch was always going to be a difficult task.Uthura, however, were well placed after ten overs at 85 for 1, but Mahela Udawatte’s dismissal for 34 in the 12th triggered a collapse as Uthura lost the remaining eight wickets for just 50 runs. Chandimal fought on with a 40-ball 50 – the highest of the tournament, but none of the other batsmen could manage more than five runs, as Uthura were eventually bowled out for 141.Ruhuna’s batting had no obvious heroes, but four batsmen breached 20 striking at more than a run-a-ball, as they maintained a fine run rate throughout. Tillakaratne Dilshan kick-started the innings by hitting four consecutive fours off Thisara Perera’s first over, and although he was dismissed soon after, Kusal Perera chimed in with three boundaries and a six, on his way to 28. Seekkuge Prasanna then added 26 off just 17 deliveries, as Ruhuna seemed poised for a big total.Uthura’s spinners, spearheaded by Akila Dananjaya, restricted the flow of runs in the middle overs, but there was enough pace around for Ruhuna’s total to keep moving at a lively pace. Jehan Mubarak added a late onslaught with an unbeaten 22-ball 31, and put up 53 for the sixth wicket with Angelo Perera to take Ruhuna to 162 in 20 overs.Jayawardene was in supreme touch in Uthura’s response, with opening partner Mahela Udawatte also finding the boundary with ease, but Jayawardene departed for 36 from 18, nicking a wide delivery to the keeper. Udawatteand Chandimal built on the quick start, but Udawatte’s demise brought a string of quick wickets for Ruhuna’s pacers, and the chase went quickly astray after the 12th over. Ishan Jayaratne was the pick of the bowlers, finishing with 4 for 23.Chandimal had been in poor form in internationals and will take some solace in his personal score, but having lost both matches so far, he and Uthura Yellows will be playing for a little more than just pride when they face off against Basnahira Greens on Wednesday.

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