Indian news broadcasters lift IPL boycott

Indian news broadcasters will cover the IPL after all, with the tournament organisers and the News Broadcasters’ Association (NBA) resolving the dispute regarding tournament footage. Lalit Modi confirmed the development on the eve of the third season of the IPL in his Twitter page. Further details on the compromise are still awaited.”NBA issue resolved. News broadcasters will carry IPL news,” Modi wrote. “Both us moved forward to ensure all fans don’t miss the IPL. My sincere thanks to the NBA members for making it happen.”The NBA, which has 34-member channels, had last month decided to boycott the tournament in protest against what it called “arbitrary” guidelines and contentious clauses regarding tournament footage. The decision followed a meeting between the NBA and officials of the IPL and Set Max, the tournament rights holder. The media coverage guidelines for 2010 had reduced the duration of match footage that news channels could carry — 30 seconds per bulletin and seven minutes a day. Repeats would be allowed three times a day, as against four previously, and while match footage could earlier be telecast with a five-minute delay from the end of the live telecast, it had been expanded to a half-hour delay.The first IPL season was boycotted by the international news agencies over several contentious clauses in the media accreditation guidelines, including a bar on supplying photographs to cricket-specific websites such as Cricinfo.The second season witnessed a repeat after News Media Coalition, the umbrella body that includes global news and photograph agencies Reuters, AP, AFP and Getty Images, objected over the same clause. However, the boycott was lifted after the IPL removed the clause from the terms of coverage.

Gibson leaves England for West Indies

Ottis Gibson has left his position as England’s bowling coach to become the head coach of West Indies, according to the UK’s Daily Telegraph.There were suggestions last week from Radio Jamaica indicating Gibson’s departure but they were flatly denied by the ECB who said they had no knowledge of any deal being struck. Since then, however, the ECB have officially given Gibson permission to talk to the West Indies Cricket Board about its vacant head coach’s position.England are due to tour Dubai and Bangladesh next month and will now almost certainly, according to the report, be travelling without Gibson.Gibson, 40, played two Tests and 15 one-day internationals for the West Indies and applied for the coach’s job in 2007. He instead, however, got an offer from England to take over from Allan Donald first as a temporary and then full-time bowling coach.He has fitted well into the disciplined regime of Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss as he tried to nurture an inexperienced attack into a potent force. The tour of South Africa showed some of his work had paid off, as England conceded just four runs to no-balls through the four-match series.It continues a tumultuous week after South African coach Mickey Arthur resigned on January 26 and the South African board fired their panel of selectors the day after. Though a blow for England, as there appears no obvious replacement, Gibson’s departure is a boon for West Indies.They sacked John Dyson as their coach last August and have recently shown signs of a resurgence, performing admirably in Australia. Gibson’s arrival would be a welcome step for a developing side with talented young fast bowlers such as Kemar Roach.

PCB makes administrative changes

After much delay, four new members have been appointed to the PCB’s governing board, all of them elected representatives of regional cricket associations. They will remain on the board for two years.The names of the four were recommended by Ijaz Butt, the PCB chairman, to President Asif Ali Zardari, the patron of the board. Major (retd) Naeem Akhtar Gillani, president of the Rawalpindi regional cricket association, replaced Shakil Sheikh, the influential president of the Islamabad cricket association.Tariq Baloch, president of the Quetta regional cricket association, has been appointed in place of Mian Mohammad Munir who is president of the Multan association. Chaudry Mohammad Anwar, president of the Faisalabad cricket association, replaces Amir Hayat Rokhri, the heads of the Lahore cricket association and Mir Haider Ali Talpur, the Hyderabad cricket association president, has replaced Mohammad Ali Shah, president of the Karachi cricket association.Shah and Shaikh are significant changes. The pair were staunch supporters of Butt, but have recently become his fiercest critics. The termination of both had been announced by the board sometime back, but they both appeared on TV claiming that until new members were officially appointed they remained members of the governing board.As expected Ehsan Mani, the former ICC president, has not been appointed as a member. Reports were circulating locally that Mani’s name had been recommended as well, but Mani had earlier told Cricinfo that he hadn’t been contacted and would not take up the position if offered in any case.There are currently seven members on the board, including a representative for the departments and associations of the domestic game. Ultimately, there will be between 13-15 members, including a number of technocrats as well as ex-players.

Tendulkar and Dravid put India on top

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were outBoth Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid took heavy toll of a tiring attack•Associated Press

Having failed to take advantage of the toss, Bangladesh paid the fullpenalty on the second day, as India’s batsmen built up a formidable totalin favourable conditions. There were centuries for Sachin Tendulkar andRahul Dravid after Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir put together theirseventh three-figure partnership. With plenty of batting to come and thelead already well over 200, Bangladesh were staring at another heavydefeat.It could have been worse if not for a Shahadat Hossan bouncer that didn’tlift appreciably and smashed into the side of Dravid’s face. He retiredhurt straight away, and was taking for a precautionary check-up. By then,the partnership with Tendulkar was worth 222, with both men taking heavytoll of a tiring attack.Tendulkar had taken 89 balls for his half-century, but he needed only afurther 45 deliveries to bring up his 45th hundred. He played his usualarray of sweeps, some of them with immense power, and threaded the oddball through the offside cordon as the runs came in a flurry. Dravid toospeeded up with a hundred in sight, and got there with a magnificentoff-drive off Shakib Al Hasan.After his exit, Tendulkar and Murali Vijay consolidated. Vijay timed theball superbly in front of the wicket, and played a delicate late-cut offShakib in a 30-run cameo that ended when he came down the track and foundthe man at mid-on. By then, Tendulkar had gone in similar fashion, havingalready struck Shakib for six and four down the ground earlier in theover. Harbhajan Singh edged the day’s penultimate delivery from ShafiulIslam behind, but with Yuvraj Singh to come, Bangladesh’s bowling travailswere far from over.They hadn’t helped their cause by dropping Tendulkar twice, while Dravidtoo enjoyed his fair share of fortune. Raqibul Hasan had batted poorly onthe opening day and his catching, or lack of it, cost his team on Monday.Tendulkar had just survived an inside-edge off the impressive RubelHossain when he miscued one in the direction of gully. Raqibul got bothhands to it, and dropped it. He was on 27 at the time, and when he hadmade 50, Raqibul put down a more difficult chance to his left at point.This time, Shahadat was the luckless bowler, and Tendulkar celebrated thereprieves by batting with real fluency in the half hour before tea.

Smart stats

  • The 222-run stand between Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar is the 17th century partnership the two, which is a record for a single pair. Two pairs have 16 hundred partnerships – Hayden-Ponting and Greenidge-Haynes. Among Indian pairs the next highest is 12, between Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly. (Click here for the full list.)

  • Dravid and Tendulkar have also put together four double-century stands, which ties them in second place with four other pairs. Hayden and Langer lead the way with six.

  • Tendulkar has become the first batsman to score 90 international hundreds, and is 23 clear of the second-placed Ponting. Brian Lara, with 53, is the only other batsman with more than 50 international centuries.

  • Gautam Gambhir’s 68 is his 11th score of 50 or more in successive Tests, which equals Viv Richards’ record. Richards achieved this feat over a 13-month period in the mid-1970s, when he scored seven hundreds and six fifties in 19 innings, averaging 94.10 in these 11 Tests. Gambhir has scored eight hundreds and five fifties during this period, averaging 89.89. (Click here for the full list updated before the start of this Test.)

  • Dravid’s 111 is his 29th Test century, which is the eighth-highest in the all-time list. It’s his third Test century versus Bangladesh, against whom he averages 70 in seven Tests.

  • Tendulkar has scored a hundred every time he has gone past 50 against Bangladesh. Thus, he has five hundreds and no half-centuries in seven Tests against Bangladesh, at an average of 136.67, which is easily his highest against any team.

Shakib had gone off with a shin problem, and as hard as the bowlerstoiled, with so few runs on the board, there was little pressure on thebatsmen, who picked the gaps and moved the score along steadily. Both mencame down the pitch occasionally to the spinners, and drove beautifullythrough the covers, while Dravid also played some fine strokes throughmidwicket. His good luck had arrived before lunch, and he made the most ofit. He had made just nine when Shafiul claimed a run-out after GautamGambhir smashed one straight back down the pitch. The Bangladeshis wereconvinced that Shafiul’s little finger had brushed the ball, but withreplays inconclusive, the third umpire had to rule in the batsman’sfavour.Then, when he was on 28, an excellent bouncer from Rubel caught himunawares. The fend was superbly caught by Junaid Siddique at slip, buteven as Dravid trudged off, Billy Bowden was signalling a no-ball. Havingresumed on 69 for 0, the Indians had seen Sehwag survive a very good shoutfrom Shahadat early on, and when he then cracked one through the covers toreach 50, the omens were ominous. Gambhir too was in fluent touch,clipping Shafiul through midwicket and using both cute deflections and thestraight bat to pinch fours off Shahadat.Sehwag bludgeoned one straight to bring up three figures, but the verynext delivery reared up at him and took the glove on its way to MushfiqurRahim. Dravid took his time to play himself in, and Gambhir assumed thescoring mantle, with a back-foot punch and a guide through the slips offShafiul taking him to a half-century for the 11th match in succession -equalling the record set by Sir Vivian Richards.Having found his bearings, Dravid started to play some gorgeous strokesthrough cover, off pace and spin alike, and when Gambhir was caught in anungainly tangle by Shafiul’s bouncer, it was very much against the grainof play. But with Tendulkar easing his way into the proceedings with anudge here and a push there, it was still India that held the ace-hand asthe teams went to lunch. After that, with Bangladesh unable to hold on tothe chances that came their way, it was all one-way traffic, 390 runsworth of it.

South Africa's trailblazer

Makhaya Ntini will play his 100th Test at Centurion against England on Wednesday. Cricinfo looks at the highlights and difficulties of his marathon journey.Makhaya Ntini will hope to keep celebrating in his 100th Test•AFP

December 1997
Tours Australia as a replacement for Roger Telemachus. Doesn’t play in the Test series but impresses on ODI debut at Perth in the tri-nation series with New Zealand.March 1998
Makes Test debut against Sri Lanka in Cape Town, becoming the first black cricketer to play for South Africa. Takes the final wicket of the match to seal South Africa victory by 70 runs.April 1999
Convicted of rape and handed six-year prison sentence. He steadfastly maintains his innocence and six months later is cleared on appeal although he is dropped for the 1999 World Cup.November 2000
Takes 6 for 66, his first five-wicket haul, against New Zealand in Bloemfontein on his second game back after the appeal.October – December 2002
Collects 37 wickets in six matches at 16.54 in South Africa’s home summer against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan.August 2003
Becomes the first South African to take 10 wickets at Lord’s, getting his name on the famous honours board twice, as his 5 for 75 and 5 for 145 powers South Africa to an innings victory.April 2005
Devastates West Indies at Port of Spain with 13 wickets in the match, collecting his career-best figures to date of 7 for 37 in the second innings as South Africa win by eight wickets.December 2005
Voted South Africa’s favourite sportsperson by South Africa Press Association, becoming the first cricketer to win the accolade.April 2006
Takes 10 wickets against Australia in Johannesburg but the tourists sneak home to a two-wicket victory. Reaches No.2 in the bowling rankings, his highest position to date.May 2006
Named Man of the Series after his 20 wickets in three Tests against New Zealand helps South Africa to a 2-0 series win.January 2007
Becomes the 21st bowler and the second South African to take 300 Test wickets, after removing Pakistan’s Mohammad Sami in Port Elizabeth. It is his 74th Test and it takes him just 19 games to move from 200 to 300 scalps.March – April 2007
Disappoints in the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies with just six wickets from seven games. Dropped from the last two games as South Africa crumbled in the semi final against Australia.December 2008 – March 2009
Takes nine wickets at 50.00 in South Africa’s 2-1 triumph over Australia and 10 wickets at 34.00 in the defeat to Australia in the return home series.

Towers stands tall with maiden century

Western Australia 4 for 244 (Towers 124, Voges 52) v Tasmania
Scorecard
Luke Towers was in charge for much of the day•Getty Images

The opener Luke Towers enjoyed a breakthrough innings with 124 as Western Australia controlled the opening day against Tasmania at Bellerive Oval. Western Australia’s batting has been a problem again this season but Towers made sure it was in good shape today, beating his previous best of 49, to steer his team to 4 for 244.Aged 21 and in his eighth first-class game, Towers showed maturity to hold the innings together after the Warriors were in some early discomfort at 2 for 65. The captain Adam Voges then chipped in with 52, combining in a 106-run stand with Towers, before falling to Brett Geeves.Towers continued to build the total during a chanceless innings that included 16 fours and lasted 286 balls. It ended when he was caught behind off Luke Butterworth after the Tigers took the second new ball. Butterworth (2 for 43) was the most successful of the local bowlers, who kept the run-rate down to 2.54 an over.

Dyson doubts West Indies' chances

John Dyson, the former West Indies coach, does not expect Chris Gayle’s outfit to trouble Australia during the three-Test series because of their disrupted preparation. The squad’s major players are on their first tour since a lengthy strike and Dyson, who was dismissed in September, doubts the tourists’ credentials against the world’s No. 4 team.”Because of the lack of cricket and the preparation that they’ve had, it’s going to be a difficult summer,” Dyson said in the Sunday Herald Sun. “They just haven’t played enough serious cricket – most of them have been on strike. They’re going to have to find form very quickly.”Dyson, who played 30 Tests for Australia, spent two years in the Caribbean and said the region’s cricket was “stuck in the past”. “You look at that great era they had [in the 1980s and 90s] and what a fantastic team it was – they were just blessed at that particular time with a team of great players,” Dyson said. “But given the way everyone else has progressed and the West Indies haven’t, it’s difficult to see that happening again. Everyone else has moved forward.”The visitors arrived in Australia on Friday and have their only warm-up for the first Test, which starts at the Gabba on November 26, against Queensland from Wednesday. David Williams, the new coach, expects to pick a full strength line-up for the four-day fixture and has Gayle, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Dwayne Bravo to call on.

Younis shouldn't have skipped NZ tour – Afridi

Shahid Afridi has said Younis Khan, who stood down as Pakistan captain on Wednesday, should not have backed out of the upcoming New Zealand tour. Pakistan cricket was plunged in another familiar bout of turmoil after Younis resigned as captain and decided to take a break from the game, saying he had “no command over the team”.”He was having problems but I don’t think he should have taken the decision to skip the tour,” Afridi told Pakistan’s . “He should have played on because the captain is the central figure in a team.”In Younis’ absence, Mohammad Yousuf has been named captain for the Test series in New Zealand, which starts on November 24. Younis promised to return to international cricket, but did not specify when he would make a comeback.Younis had quit after a long-running dispute with several senior players was not resolved. There was added pressure on him after a poor run with the bat in both the Champions Trophy and the recent one-dayers against New Zealand in Abu Dhabi, which Pakistan lost 2-1. He had relinquished the captaincy last month after the Champions Trophy, following allegations of match-fixing, but was persuaded to remain at the helm, and was even appointed leader till the 2011 World Cup.

Rajasthan teams kept out of Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy

The fight for control of the Rajasthan Cricket Association (RCA) has spilled over onto the cricket field, with teams from each faction reaching Indore to represent the state in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, the domestic Twenty20 competition. However, the Indian board has said that in the current scenario it cannot allow either team to participate in the tournament, which begins on Tuesday.The fight between the two factions – one of which is headed by Lalit Modi – has already forced the BCCI to remove Jaipur as the venue of the first India-Australia ODI, which will now be held in Vadodara next Sunday.”Since there is no clarity about which is the proper side representing Rajasthan, we can’t allow both the teams,” Ratnakar Shetty, BCCI’s chief administrative officer, told Cricinfo. “If there is a court order that nominates the correct team, we can allow that particular team. Till then our stand remains the same.”Modi had lost the RCA elections in March earlier this year but in September Sanjay Dixit, the new president, was removed from power in September by the Modi faction, which claimed a majority. The no-confidence motion brought in by the Sri Ganganagar District Association was subsequently accepted, and it was decided that fresh elections would be held in October 14. The date was later postponed to November 19.However, in the interim, both factions have been sending teams to BCCI-organised events. Last week, both teams were refused permission to participate in the Under-19 National Women’s Championship.

Williams eyes full-time job

Interim West Indies coach David Williams has said he is keen on filling the full-time post made vacant after the axing of John Dyson. Williams, 45, the former West Indies wicketkeeper-batsman, served as Dyson’s assistant till the end of the recent Bangladesh series at home.Following Dyson’s sacking after West Indies’ dismal performance in the two Tests and three ODIs against Bangladesh, the WICB appointed Williams to oversee next month’s Champions Trophy in South Africa. But Williams said he was keen on taking up the top job permanently.”Of course I am interested. I am the assistant coach and it is only natural I would want to one day become the head coach of the team,” Williams told . “I set certain standards for myself as far as my coaching goes and would like to end up as head coach.”Williams, who played 11 Tests and 36 ODIs between 1992 and 1998, was appointed assistant coach in September 2007 when the West Indies travelled to South Africa for the inaugural World Twenty20. At the time, he served as deputy to David Moore, the then interim head coach, before Dyson took over later that year.Williams refused to comment on Dyson’s departure but said he was now focused on West Indies’ success in the Champions Trophy, which runs from September 22 to October 5.”I am not aware of the situation concerning the removal of John as coach and I am staying far away from that,” he said. “I have been given a job to do with this team and I am going to do my best. At the end of the day, one has his reputation at stake and every time I go out there, I try to give my best.”As a coach you need a good run and I am hoping that the WICB follows protocol and offer me the top job once it is available.”Williams will be in charge of a makeshift West Indies side after several top players, including Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Shivnarine Chanderpaul, were overlooked for the Champions Trophy. The move followed the controversial Bangladesh Test series when all the star players made themselves unavailable because of a contracts dispute between the board and the West Indies Players’ Association (WIPA).

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