Dravid, Tendulkar lead strong reply


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Sachin Tendulkar looked good for that elusive 100th international ton, till he was bowled by Peter Siddle in the final over of the day•Getty Images

Sachin Tendulkar was foiled yet again in his pursuit of a 100th international century, as Peter Siddle atoned in the final over for an earlier no-ball that reprieved Rahul Dravid, on another absorbing day of the first Test between Australia and India at the MCG.Driven largely by Tendulkar’s stand of 117 with Dravid, India reached a threatening 3 for 214 in reply to Australia’s 333, but cursed the loss of Tendulkar for 73 on the stroke of stumps. Only a handful of overs had passed since Dravid had been bowled by Siddle and handed another start after Marais Erasmus’ check revealed a front-foot transgression.Australia’s fielders gnashed their teeth over the incident and had struggled in the field, as catches went down and the captain Michael Clarke’s resources were stretched by the absence of a fifth bowler. But Tendulkar’s exit gave them cause for some hope for the third morning.Tendulkar’s serene innings in Dravid’s company had wrestled the day India’s way, following a second session speckled with incident. That period of play was capped when James Pattinson splayed the stumps of Virender Sehwag, whose streaky but entertaining 67 took him past 8000 Test runs. Sehwag gave two clear chances and another near enough to it, making merry until Pattinson was rewarded for a sustained and hostile spell in the lead-up to the tea interval. The bowler had earlier crossed swords with Sehwag in an ill-tempered confrontation over the matter of right of way while running between the wickets.Pattinson stood clearly above the rest as the most demanding member of Australia’s attack, showing a fiery countenance as well as speed and movement, but the limitations of the rest were exposed on a pitch now friendly to batsmen. Siddle was punished early before his late rally, and Ben Hilfenhaus used the new ball with intelligence, disposing of Gautam Gambhir, but later faded.He, Hilfenhaus and Pattinson had all hung around in the morning to build the hosts’ total. Zaheer Khan claimed Brad Haddin and Siddle to return deserved figures of 4 for 77, while R Ashwin accounted for Hilfenhaus and the last man Nathan Lyon. Umesh Yadav did not add to his three wickets on the first day, while Ishant Sharma will bowl far worse for better returns than his 0 for 48 in 24 exacting overs.Siddle and Haddin resumed against a refreshed India on a brilliantly warm and sunny day, and were not long in facing difficulty. Zaheer gained swing one way and seam the other in the day’s second over with the still-new ball, and Haddin was bereft. He edged one delivery to the third man fence, either side of failing to cover, then snicked another low to gully where Virender Sehwag held it.Haddin asked Sehwag if the catch had carried, and there was a further delay as the umpires checked for a possible no-ball, but eventually Australia’s wicketkeeper was marching off, before many at the MCG had even settled into their seats. Siddle and Pattinson resisted momentarily, before Zaheer found another precise delivery to catch Siddle’s edge as he pushed from the crease.Hilfenhaus announced himself with a slap to the cover fence. He added a hairy edge over the slip cordon and an improbably commanding lofted drive down the ground, both off Zaheer, to push the total past 300. The impressively upright and correct Pattinson followed up by punching Ishant Sharma splendidly down the ground, helping his confidence but also indicating that the surface was becoming rather more pleasant for batting than at any stage of day one.

Smart stats

  • Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar have put together 20 century stands in Tests, which is the most, four more than the next best.

  • Dravid has been involved in 88 century stands in Tests, and Tendulkar in 84. Those are the two highest in Tests; Ricky Ponting is next with 82.

  • Virender Sehwag became the 23rd batsman, and the fifth Indian, to go past 8000 Test runs.

  • This was Sehwag’s 53rd fifty-plus score, of which only eight have come at a strike rate of less than 70.

  • Tendulkar has gone 18 innings without a century in international cricket, but he has seven fifties during this period.

  • Australia’s total of 333 is only the eighth time a team has posted a triple Nelson score in the first innings of a Test. The last time a team won a Test with this total was way back in 1906.

The duo reached drinks together, adding a pesky 27 in all before the introduction of Ashwin brought a Hilfenhaus heave to long on. Pattinson connected with a handful of further decent blows before Lyon was bowled around his pads. Sehwag and Gambhir negotiated a brief spell before lunch. Ed Cowan, Australia’s debutant and top scorer on day one, was unable to field for a time due to back soreness, his place taken by Daniel Christian.When the players returned, Sehwag and Gambhir struggled initially against the seam and swing of Hilfenhaus and Pattinson. A Sehwag edge off Pattinson burst through the hands of Michael Hussey in the gully – a chance that should have been held. Tempers were raised when Pattinson and Sehwag passed closely beside one another as the batsman took a run, resulting in a heated exchange that also drew in Siddle and had Sehwag pointing the senior bowler back to his fielding post.The confrontation deflected momentary attention from Gambhir, whose best touch has been missing for most of 2011. Here he scratched around for three runs in 23 balls, the last of which was a shortish, seaming delivery from Hilfenhaus that Gambhir edged forlornly behind with an open face. Dravid arrived with the ball still new and Sehwag not yet into stride.Quietly, the pair established themselves, offering due deference to some wholehearted bowling and accumulating runs in ones and twos before any great flurry of boundaries could be sought. The 15th over was reached before Sehwag opened up, twice stroking Siddle to the offside boundary, then repeating the trick by crashing Lyon to the sightscreen off successive balls to pass 50 from a sedate – by his standards – 59 balls. The next delivery brought a miscue and a quarter-chance to long on, where David Warner may or may not have reached the ball before it touched the turf.Pattinson drew another chance from Sehwag’s flailing bat when an edge behind was turfed unattractively by Brad Haddin, and it appeared India would reach the interval without further loss. But Pattinson’s fire and persistence were justly rewarded in the moments before tea, with another freewheeling driving resulting in an inside edge that tilted middle stump.Tendulkar made it to the middle accompanied by his requisite ovation, and caused Australian hearts to leap when an inside edge to his second ball slipped centimetres from the grasp of short leg. Tea came and went with Pattinson’s electricity still in the air, but on their return Tendulkar and Dravid set out with intent to control the innings.The first ball of the evening was flashed high over the slips and the rope for six by Tendulkar, not permitting Siddle a moment to gather himself. The next flowed through midwicket for three, and Tendulkar’s course was set. He maintained a rollicking pace for most of the next two hours, taking particular toll on Siddle, and defusing Lyon.At the other end Dravid fought himself as much as the bowlers, not locating the fluency of his England efforts, but nonetheless providing the foil Tendulkar required to blunt Australia’s bowlers. Michael Clarke shuffled his quartet as best he could, but the pacemen’s spells became briefer and briefer, forcing the use of Hussey and even David Warner’s under-ripe legspin.The century partnership was the 20th between Tendulkar and Dravid in Tests, a milestone befitting Test cricket’s most prolific batting partnership. It appeared to have ended shortly after when Siddle brought one back between the latter’s bat and pad. The roar of a crowd of 52,858 was redoubled, however, when replays showed that Siddle had overstepped.Siddle’s next delivery went close to perforating Dravid’s defence again, and the bowler’s pace did not flag as he pushed himself to make amends. For perhaps the first time in his innings Tendulkar became a little tentative, mindful of the close, and he was not decisive enough in his push down the track to prevent an in-ducker from bursting through to disturb the stumps. The nightwatchman Ishant Sharma survived the final three balls, but his presence has provided Australia a path into India’s batting when the Test resumes.

Underdog status suits us, says Jayawardene

Mahela Jayawardene, the Sri Lanka batsman, has said his side will enjoy bearing the underdog tag on their tour of South Africa because they have exceeded expectations before. Jayawardene pointed to the 2007 and 2011 World Cups, saying Sri Lanka were not favourites in those tournaments but managed to reach the finals in both editions.”When you are playing away from home and with the unit we have, we will be tagged as underdogs,” he said. “I think it’s a good way to go to South Africa. Expectations of us are going to be lower after the way we performed in the last three Tests [against Pakistan in the UAE].”Even when we went into the last two World Cups [2007 and 2011] we were not the clear favourites. We came from behind and did what needed to be done.”Sri Lanka are yet to win a Test this year and have lost three series – away to England, at home to Australia and against Pakistan in the UAE – by the same scoreline: 0-1. Their poor run prompted Kepler Wessels, the former South Africa captain, to say a South Africa A side would beat Sri Lanka on present form. Jayawardene said the only way Sri Lanka could respond to that statement was through their on-field performances.”The only way we can react is by performing and showing him what a good side we are. Everyone has the right to their own opinion. The statement is great ammunition for us to motivate ourselves and send a clear message to the players that this is how they are thinking about us so let’s try to change their mind.”Sri Lanka have lost six of the seven Tests they have played in South Africa, and Jayawardene expected this tour to be difficult too. “We have to be realistic in knowing what challenges face us. We know what the conditions are and what the attack is going to be, therefore it’s important to prepare.”Jayawardene missed the fifth ODI and Twenty20 against Pakistan with a knee injury but says he expects to be 100% fit by the first Test against South Africa at Centurion, which starts December 15. “Right now I am feeling much better with the injury but I haven’t started running yet; I’ve only batted in the nets. It’s been only two weeks since the last game I played. With the progress I have made in the last two weeks I am quite positive that I should be more-or-less 100% fit by the first Test.” Sri Lanka have brought in Thilan Samaraweera as cover for Jayawardene.During the ODI series against Pakistan, Jayawardene became the second Sri Lanka batsman to reach 10,000 runs in one-day internationals, and he is just 46 runs away from reaching the mark in Tests too. Jayawardene said that getting 10,000 runs in both formats was a goal he had set himself for 2011. “I focused on that double after the 2007 World Cup and I had a target of achieving them by this year. Getting to 10,000 ODI runs is a personal achievement I am very proud of. There will be arguments that I could have done better but given the roles that I have had to play in the team I feel I’ve managed to win matches for the team rather than just play for personal achievements. In that process to get 10,000 ODI runs I am quite happy.”These are things that motivate me to be a better cricketer. Only five guys have done the 10,000-run double in the history of the game [Sachin Tendulkar, Ricky Ponting, Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis and Brian Lara]. I will be really thrilled if I am the first Sri Lankan to do that.”

Lara tips Darren Bravo for greatness

Brian Lara has tipped West Indies batsman Darren Bravo for greatness but also warned him that he will now be targeted by teams. Bravo, who is frequently compared to Lara for the way he bats, has scored three centuries in his previous four Tests – one in Bangladesh and two in India – and Lara said there would be more.”We haven’t won any Test matches in India but I still believe that the young players have done a great job,” Lara said. “[Kraigg] Brathwaite, [Adrian] Barath, [Kirk] Edwards and Bravo, of course, they don’t even have 50 Test matches between them but they all look very good. Bravo seems to go from strength to strength. It took a bit of time before he got his first hundred, but now he’s had a taste of it and he’s going to carry on.”He’s got to understand now that a lot of the opposition will start looking at him – the Australians, the English – because he’s now a recognised player, and he will come under a bit of pressure. Hopefully, he has the maturity to come out of it.”Bravo’s 136 against India at Eden Gardens gave him the same run aggregate and average as Lara had after 12 Tests (941 runs at 47.05). He nearly equalled Lara’s score of 167 in his 13th Test, but fell for 166 in Mumbai. Lara, who is the fifth-highest scorer in Tests, said Bravo would be “one of the great players.”Lara was optimistic about the talent of young cricketers in the Caribbean but said the challenge would be for players to stay positive despite West Indies not winning often. “The infrastructure for our cricket is very poor and there’s nothing to build on. I still believe that what we’re seeing out in the middle is raw talent. I don’t believe they’re getting what is necessary to harness their talent.”You’re seeing some of the best young players in the world. Hopefully they will hold up under the pressure because it’s hard: you’re playing cricket, you’re not winning, and you’ve got to make a career for yourself at the same time. Until I see a few things done, administration and infrastructure-wise, I still believe we’re going to have those sporadic performances where we’re going to beat the best in the world, but it’s not going to be on a consistent basis.”

WAPDA stay top with big win

Water and Power Development Authority needed just 30 overs on the fourth day to complete a nine-wicket victory over Islamabad at the Diamond Club Ground in Islamabad. The hosts started the day still 24 runs behind with five wickets in hand. Rana Naved-ul-Hasan made sure the lower order did not get too many runs, completing a six-wicket haul that helped WAPDA bowl Islamabad out for 210 in their second innings. WAPDA were left with 55 to chase and, though they lost an early wicket, got there in 8.5 overs. The win keeps WAPDA at the top of the table with five wins from six games.

State Bank of Pakistan made it four wins from six games by beating Rawalpindi by 93 runs at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium. Rawalpindi had started the day in trouble, on 37 for 2 chasing 333. That soon became 75 for 4, but the middle order offered some resistance. Usman Saeed scored 48 and Adnan Mufti got 65 but State Bank were always favourites. Seamer Rizwan Haider took 3 for 58 and all the other bowlers chipped in as State Bank bowled Rawalpindi out for 239.

National Bank of Pakistan beat Karachi Blues by nine wickets at the National Stadium in Karachi, with Nasir Jamshed smashing 50 off 32 balls to help them chase 97 in just 9.4 overs. Karachi needed to bat out the day to salvage a draw from the game but despite a century from Khalid Latif they could only bat out 67.1 overs and reach 318, leaving National Bank 97 to win. National Bank went for the runs and Jamshed got them off to a flier in the company of Khurram Manzoor. Once Manzoor fell, with the score 41, Kamran Akmal came in and smashed three fours and a six in his 29 off 18 balls, and took National Bank home along with Jamshed.Karachi had set a solid base for a big second-innings score, reaching 90 for 1 by stumps on the third day. They continued to look solid on the fourth day, with Shahzaib Hasan going from 52 not out to 83 and Latif settling down for a big knock. The middle order did not contribute much though, leaving Latif to bat with the tail. He managed to get 114 off 127 balls but it was not enough to take Karachi to safety. National Bank’s bowlers shared the wickets around with left-arm spinner Qaiser Abbas taking 3 for 39.

A late collapse meant Sialkot conceded a 98-run first-innings lead and Pakistan International Airlines took three points out of the match at the Jinnah Stadium in Sialkot. Sialkot started the day on 299 for 4, trying to overhaul PIA’s 505. Naved Sarwar and Mansoor Amjad added another 97 to take Sialkot to 396 for 4. Sarwar scored slowly, taking a total of 358 balls for his 82 while Amjad got 72 off 129. Once their stand was broken, though, a collapse began. Sialkot lost six wickets for 11 runs and were bowled out for 407. Seamer Anwar Ali ran through the tail and finished with 7 for 109. PIA then had a bit of batting practice and reached 153 for 3 with Agha Sabir and Fahad Iqbal scoring half-centuries.

Naseer Akram’s second five-wicket haul in as many games helped Faisalabad register their first win of the season as they beat Habib Bank Limited by 139 runs at the Iqbal Stadium in Faisalabad. HBL started the fourth day on 33 for 0 chasing 326, and suffered a middle-order collapse that saw six wickets fall for 62 runs. Nos. 3 to 7 could only manage single digit scores to leave them 128 for 7, Naseer having done most of the damage. Danish Kaneria offered some lower-order resistance with his 30 but HBL were bowled out for 186.

DRS in place for ODIs and Tests

South Africa’s home ODI and Test series against Australia will have the full benefits of the DRS after the host broadcasters unveiled their provisions for its use during the matches.Following the ICC executive board’s decision to revert to a system of competing teams deciding for themselves whether or not to use the system, South Africa and Australia agreed to implement the aids for decision-making that were also in place the last time these two sides met, in South Africa in 2009.The officiating umpires will be able to call on technological aids including super and ultra slow motion cameras, ball-tracking via Hawkeye and evidence of edges via HotSpot cameras.There will be no restriction on the types of dismissals that may be referred by the competing teams, meaning lbw decisions can be referred.Australia will employ a similar incarnation of the DRS in its two-match home series against New Zealand in December, but it is unlikely they will be able to employ the system against India in the four Tests that follow, given the BCCI’s scepticism about the system.

Can Zimbabwe extend their Harare form?

Match facts

September 11, Harare
Start time 0930 (0730 GMT)With the Harare pitch better suited to fast bowling, Brian Vitori is likely to return to Zimbabwe’s XI•Associated Press

The Big Picture

Pakistan could wrap up the ODI series in Harare, with a match to spare for experimentation. They held their nerve in a tense victory on Thursday, but will want to consolidate their position by turning in a more dominant performance this time.For that, they will need a better start from the opening batsmen and bigger contributions from the middle order. If that happens, and is complimented with the same feistiness Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq showed in the first match, the batting line-up will provide a formidable challenge to Zimbabwe. Pakistan’s fast bowlers can look forward to a more helpful surface and Zimbabwe will have to steel themselves to contend with the likes of Aizaz Cheema in more accommodating conditions. The visiting spinners did a good containing job in the first match and much of the same will be expected of them in Harare.Zimbabwe will want to prove their performance against Bangladesh was not a one-off. They have left the curse of Bulawayo behind and return to the happy hunting ground of Harare. The venue itself should lift the home team, who prefer the bounce and carry of the Harare pitch to the slower surface in Bulawayo. Zimbabwe’s bowling attack will be more comfortable with the slight assistance they will receive, although coach Alan Butcher acknowledged that they will have to work harder against Pakistan than they did against Bangladesh.On the whole, Zimbabwe have shown signs of progress, remaining competitive until the final over of the first ODI and scoring over 240 runs in the chase. They also impressed with the ball, reining Pakistan in to a manageable total after Younis got off to a flier. All that effort amounted to nothing in the results column though, so Zimbabwe will have to remind themselves not to get too demoralised by defeat and to continue to learn as the summer progresses.

Form guide (most recent first)

Zimbabwe LLLWW
Pakistan WWWLL

In the spotlight

Hamiltom Masakadza has embodied the poor form of Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, having scored only 43 runs in the three ODIs there this summer. He also failed in the Test match and has been persisting through a mini-lean patch that he will want to end soon. While his technique has improved and his maturity is now evident, Masakadza has to get on top of bowling attacks more, especially since he bats at the crucial No. 3 spot. He has been out in single figures in nine of his last 15 ODI innings and will want to show that he can be more consistent. Masakadza’s medium-pacers have also become key partnership breakers for Zimbabwe and he will enjoy the chance to bowl again, if it is given to him.His return to international cricket went almost unnoticed, but Shoaib Malik will want to prove that he still has what it takes to perform at the top level. He was out to an outlandish catch from Tatenda Taibu in Bulawayo, after facing only five balls, so spending some time at the crease is bound to at the top of Malik’s agenda after being out of the game for over a year. The last time he played a big innings was during the Champions Trophy in 2009, when Pakistan beat India.

Team news

Zimbabwe are likely go back to their three-pronged seam attack, bringing back Kyle Jarvis and Brian Vitori. If they also include a spinner in Ray Price, it will mean shortening their batting line-up, something they have expressed concern over. Their other option is to use allrounder Greg Lamb as the solitary spinner and bolster the batting line-up. Malcolm Waller’s position may in doubt in the middle order as Zimbabwe look to settle the number six and seven positions, and Craig Ervine could return.Zimbabwe: (probable) 1 Vusi Sibanda, 2 Chamu Chibhabha, 3 Hamilton Masakadza, 4 Brendan Taylor, 5 Tatenda Taibu, 6 Malcolm Waller/Craig Ervine, 7 Elton Chigumbura, 8 Ray Price/Greg Lamb, 9 Brian Vitori, 10 Kyle Jarvis, 11 Chris Mpofu.Pakistan will also want to emphasise on pace, taking into account the Harare pitch, and would most likely retain a three-man seam attack. Junaid Khan was expensive and may be replaced with Sohail Khan, but Aizaz Cheema impressed and Sohail Tanvir should keep his place as well. Pakistan indicated that all 17 members of their squad will get a game and, so far, legspinner Yasir Shah, opening batsmen Rameez Raja and No. 3 Asad Shafiq are yet to play. Shah would have been more effective in Bulawayo and may have to sit out for now, but Rameez could replace Imran Farhat if Pakistan want to experiment.Pakistan: (probable) 1 Mohammad Hafeez, 2 Imran Farhat/Rameez Raja, 3 Younis Khan, 4 Misbah-ul-Haq, 5 Shoaib Malik, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Adnan Akmal, 8 Sohail Tanvir, 9 Saeed Ajmal, 10 Junaid Khan/Sohail Khan, 11 Aizaz Cheema.

Pitch and conditions

Brendan Taylor would say that the tour has finally moved out of the subcontinent when the match in Harare gets underway. Although the pitch will not offer as much bounce and movement as Taylor may want, there will definitely be more in it for the bowlers than there was in Bulawayo, negating the role of the spinners slightly. An all-round cricket surface, the pitch will also be easier to bat on and should produce a high-scoring contest. Harare is slightly cooler than Bulawayo, although with summer approaching, a warm day is expected.

Stats and trivia

  • Of Taylor’s four ODI hundreds, three have been in losing causes for Zimbabwe. The century that he scored in a victory was against Sri Lanka last year, and is Taylor’s only ton in Harare.
  • Younis’ average against Zimbabwe is 50.85 – better than his average against any other team that he has played more than three matches against. He has never scored a hundred against them.

Quotes

“Different conditions in Harare may make us think of a different attack. Vitori’s omission was tactical, but I’m sure he will play a role in Harare.”

Flower to miss Ireland game

Andy Flower will miss his first match since taking over as England team director when he sits out the one-day international against Ireland in Dublin. The match takes place three days after the final Test against India, at The Oval, and Richard Halsall, the fielding coach, will be in charge of the team.When Flower signed his new deal with the ECB in May it was widely believed that the subject of him taking a break from the demands of the job was considered although nothing was written into the contract. In many ways Flower’s role is more intense than the players’ because he has to plot and plan for the next challenge and is involved with all three formats.The only time Flower has missed any of England’s cricket since taking the top job were the second and third days of the first Test against Australia, at Brisbane, when he underwent surgery to remove a melanoma from below his right eye. Halsall took charge of the team in Flower’s absence which gave a clear indication of the contingency plans in place.Flower will rejoin the squad ahead of the Twenty20 international against India, at Old Trafford, on August 31 which is then followed by five one-day internationals. Two additional Twenty20s have now been added to the end of the season against West Indies, to help fulfil contractual obligations following the loss of the Stanford games, before the team fly to India for a one-day series in early October.England then have their longest break of recent times before Christmas when they aren’t in action during November and December. However, after the festive season the demands increase again with a full tour against Pakistan in UAE followed by a short series in Sri Lanka. It remains to be seen whether Flower fits in any further breaks before the start of another full summer in 2012.

Focussed ahead of Canada game – Hassan

Afghanistan fast bowler Hamid Hassan has said playing on the domestic circuit in Pakistan and Sri Lanka recently has helped his team’s preparations ahead of their four-day Intercontinental Cup fixture against Canada. Canada host Afghanistan, the current Intercontinental Cup holders, in a four-day fixture from Tuesday in King City.”We’ve played some domestic three-day games in Pakistan and also in Sri Lanka ahead of this first fixture, and we’ve been very focussed,” Hassan said. “I hope we take what we’ve learnt with us to Canada for our first match of this competition.”Afghanistan, who made their Intercontinental debut in the previous edition of the tournament, beat Scotland in the final, and Hassan said the the team now relished the longer format of the game. “When we first started playing four-day cricket it took us time to embrace it, but now we enjoy it a lot.” In March, Hassan was part of the Marylebone Cricket Club team that played against English county champions Nottinghamshire in a four-day game in Abu Dhabi, along with team-mate, Mohammad Nabi.Hassan, who has played nine first-class games, picking up 52 wickets at 22.32, was the leading wicket-taker in the last edition of the Intercontinental Cup with 43 scalps. He said he was looking forward to a bit of help from the Canadian conditions to build on his tally. “I’ve never been to Canada but we’ve been told the weather will be good, and hopefully the wickets will seam around so I’m able to be effective with the ball.”Canada will be under a new captain, Jimmy Hansra, who took over from Ashish Bagai following the World Cup. Hansra said the experience Canada gained at the World Cup, although in a different format, could come in handy. “We’re a fairly young team and we’re going to be taking what we learnt at the 50-over ICC Cricket World Cup and try to translate that into the four-day competition we’re about to start playing.”Playing the defending champions first up, Hansra said, would benefit Canada as it would demonstrate how they measured up in the competition and the areas that needed to be worked on. “It’s nice to have a stronger team upfront as it will help us know where we stand. It should help us to prepare for the tournament.”The squads:
Canada: Jimmy Hansra (capt), Harvir Baidwan, Khurram Chohan, Parth Desai, Tyson Gordon, Ruvindu Gunasekera, Zahid Hussain, Usman Limbada, Henry Osinde, Hiral Patel, Junaid Siddiqui, Zeeshan Siddiqui, Zubin Surkari, Hamza Tariq.Afghanistan: Nawroz Mangal (capt), Amir Hamza Hotak, Asghar Stanikzai, Dollat Zadran, Hamid Hassan, Izzatullah Dawlatzai, Karim Khan Sadiq, Mirwais Ashraf, Mohammed Nabi, Mohammad Shahzad, Noor Ali Zadran, Samiullah Shinwari, Shabir Noori, Shapoor Zadran.

Durham fight back after Trescothick ton

ScorecardMarcus Trescothick confirmed his position as the leading run-maker in countycricket with a masterly 163 for Somerset on the opening day of the CountyChampionship clash with leaders Durham at Taunton.It was the former England opener’s fifth Championship century this season – oneof them a double – and took his tally in the competition to 1,373 at an averageof over 80.But Durham fought hard after the home side had reached 231 for 1, ArulSuppiah and Nick Compton contributing half-centuries. Mitchell Claydon peggedSomerset back with four for 84 and they closed on 409 for 7.It was a tough day for Steve Harmison, who conceded 65 from 10 wayward overswhich included four wides and three no-balls. But Ian Blackwell enjoyed his return to Taunton, claiming the wickets of Trescothick and Craig Kieswetter for a return of 2 for 53.It looked as though Durham skipper Phil Mustard would rue his decision to fieldfirst as Trescothick and Suppiah overcame the new ball with few alarms. They had put on 98 when Suppiah, on 52, was caught in the slips by Michael Di Venuto off a Claydon lifter in the 25th over. The Malaysia-born batsman had out-scored the watchful Trescothick to make his runs off 70 balls with eight fours.It was 105 for 1 at lunch and Trescothick moved to fifty off 105 balls.Compton then reached the same landmark off 85 deliveries as the pair added 133in 31 overs before he was bowled for 56, playing across a full delivery fromClaydon.By then Trescothick had blossomed to reach his hundred off 149 balls, with 18fours. The second fifty occupied just 44 deliveries as he made the most of ashort boundary on the town side of the ground.Chris Jones hit three fours on his home Championship debut before Claydon hadhim caught behind off a steeply rising ball for 13.At 261 for 3 Somerset’s middle order, which has proved vulnerable thisseason, was exposed. It failed again as James Hildreth pulled a short ball from Graham Onions to square leg, where Dale Benkenstein took a sharp diving catch, and Kieswetteredged Blackwell to slip to leave Somerset 322 for 5.Trescothick had moved to 150 off 204 balls and lofted Blackwell for a straightsix just before his dismissal, an unlucky one as he was caught down the leg sideby wicketkeeper Mustard with the total on 336.Peter Trego hit a rapid 22 to ensure a fourth batting point before being bowleddriving at Claydon, who was comfortably the pick of the Durham seam attack. Itwas the second delivery with the second new ball.Alfonso Thomas (23 not out) and Murali Kartik (25 not out) then survived somekamikaze running between the wickets to add a valuable 49 and take their teampast 400.

Ireland want 'meritocracy' in world cricket

Cricket Ireland chief executive Warren Deutrom has welcomed the about-turn on contentious plans to bar the Associate nations from the 2015 World Cup, but urged the ICC to give developing cricketing countries such as Ireland a fair chance to join cricket’s elite.”The one thing that we shouted out more loudly than anything else is ‘meritocracy’ – not ‘we want to be given this as a right’, but ‘we want the opportunity to be better’,” Deutrom told .Ireland have made a strong case for higher honours in recent years, having beaten Pakistan during their first World Cup appearance in 2007 and scored a remarkable win over England in India earlier this year. Though their inclusion in 2015 continues to give them something to aim for, there remains no official route or timetable for them to be awarded Test status.”All we’ve asked for from the very start is simply a road map to where we go next because what we’ve done, and what we’ve achieved, is everything that has been asked of us,” added Deutrom.”We’ve got a business and we are prepared to develop that business but the only way we can move that business on is to get that additional support, to be able to afford more ODIs and the opportunity to play those ODIs,” he said. “And then a pathway perhaps to Test cricket. That has to be the holy grail for us.”Amid a myriad of tweaks and amendments made at the meeting of the ICC’s Executive Board in Hong Kong, the format and composition of the next two World Cups and World Twenty20s and the implementation of the Decision Review System have attracted plenty of attention, but there remains another high-profile issue to be decided upon: whether or not to scrap the ICC’s two-year rotational presidency.Deutrom said he was in favour of doing away with automatic rotation, a policy which was put under review after Australia and New Zealand’s nominee for the position, ex-Australian prime minister John Howard, was rejected by other countries last year.”The principle is quite simply that it’s the best person for the job,” he said. “And the best person for the job might already reside within Pakistan or Bangladesh, but the idea is that as long as the best person for the job is found, we should support that.”