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Nairobi gets a third ODI venue

The Nairobi Jaffery Sports Club has been granted official ODI status by the ICC following the final inspection by Chris Broad on January 7.Cricket Kenya is particularly pleased with the accreditation of this ground as it has a picturesque setting and has the size and facilities to become a high-class spectator venue for international matches. Officials had been worried as torrential rain in recent weeks left the venue underwater less than a week ago.This news means that all three venues for the World Cricket League, which gets underway on January 30, now have ODI status. The other two venues are Nairobi Gymkhana and Ruaraka Sports Clubm which was granted ODI status at the end of last year..

Solanki says ICL bans are 'restraint of trade'

Vikram Solanki: ‘I’m no expert on legal matters but it seems like restraint of trade’ © Getty Images
 

Former England batsman Vikram Solanki, who was in effect forced to withdraw from the Indian Cricket League or risk being barred from playing in England, has warned that such sanctions constitute a restraint of trade.Joining in the escalating debate on English cricketers’ role in the two leagues, Solanki also called on the Professional Cricketers’ Association to demand clarification from the England board as to why players are being prevented from playing in India when it does not conflict with existing contracts.”Sport in general is a short career for most people and you must take opportunities to maximise your earning potential,” Solanki told PA Sport. “I haven’t spoken to anyone in the England camp recently but I can see no reason why they wouldn’t be tempted by the sums of money that are being offered.”It’s unreasonable to place sanctions, restrictions, rules without giving good reason. I’m baffled by the reasoning offered sometimes for some of the sanctions and us as a group of players and the PCA should demand some clarity on the matter definitely. I’m no expert on legal matters but it seems like restraint of trade.”It remains to be seen what happens but in the next year or so, the face of cricket could change totally. People will find it hard to resist the money and that might be the big point that makes the changes to the traditional formats and seasons that we’ve grown accustomed to.”As for his own career, Solanki told PA Sport that he hoped his ICL involvement would not mean the end of his England chances. “I’d like to think if I had a reasonable year I’d have as good a chance as anyone of playing for England. This is what I mean about there being some reasoning behind if myself playing in the ICL should hinder my opportunities to play for England. If that is the case, then I haven’t quite figured that out yet.”

Wade inflicts same old woes on Redbacks


Scorecard

Gerard Denton finished with the best figures for Victoria © Getty Images

Matthew Wade justified Victoria’s decision to make him their No. 1 wicketkeeper with 83 and four catches on debut as the Bushrangers took control against South Australia. Despite all their off-season batting work the Redbacks showed little improvement from their woeful 2006-07, ending the day at 8 for 162 and trailing by 276.Gerard Denton and Dirk Nannes claimed three wickets each as several Redbacks made starts and failed to go on. Matthew Elliott fared best with 42 but the Borgas brothers’ first Pura Cup match together will be one to forget – Jason edged Denton behind for 1 and Cameron went in the same manner for 0.Mark Cosgrove managed six fours in his 34 before nudging to short leg off Bryce McGain right before tea. A further five wickets fell in the final session and at the close the home side was 127 short of avoiding the follow on, with Cullen Bailey on 18 and Jason Gillespie on 2.South Australia were also disappointing with the ball as they let Victoria’s last two pairs add 118, with Wade the major contributor. He was chosen ahead of Adam Crosthwaite because of his batting skill and although he survived a couple of dropped catches he showed serious potential, striking nine fours and two sixes. Nannes, who made 31 not out, and Peter Siddle (17) were Wade’s tail-end helpers.

MCG to host rematch of last year's WNCL final

The Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) will host a rematch of last year’s Women’s National Cricket League (WNCL) finals when arch-rivals Victoria Spirit and the New South Wales Breakers do battle in the three-match series beginning on 31 January.The finals showdown is a best-of-three match series with the limited-over games scheduled for 31 January, 1 February and the deciding match, if required, on Monday 2 February.Victoria Spirit claimed its inaugural WNCL title last season, defeating the New South Wales Breakers 2-0 in the finals series, also played at the MCG.Since the women’s national competition was established as the WNCL in 1996-97, the two sides have dominated the championship. New South Wales won six consecutive titles before Victoria broke the sequence to claim last year’s championship.In their two limited-over encounters this season, the sides completed a thrilling tie at Butler Oval in Frankston, before Victoria Spirit claimed a four wicket victory the next day at the same venue.Overall, the two states have played 25 times with the WNCL head-to-head battle standing at New South Wales (15), Victoria (9) and one tied result (this year).In WNCL finals series, they have met on four occasions – 1996-97, 1998-99, 2001-02 and 2002-03.Six players have played in all 25 WNCL matches between the states – Bronwyn Calver, Julie Hayes and Lisa Keightley (New South Wales), and Cathryn Fitzpatrick, Melanie Jones and Belinda Clark (Victoria). Clark played 15 WNCL matches for New South Wales before relocating to Victoria.Play begins at 1000 and entry is free. Patrons should enter via gate 8.

England salvage incredible tie

50 overs New Zealand 340 for 7 (How 139) tied with England 340 for 6 (Mustard 83, Cook 69)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

How’s brilliant 86-ball hundred took New Zealand desperately close to sealing the series © Getty Images
 

Jamie How produced the innings of his life to guide New Zealand to within a single blow of victory in the fourth ODI at Napier, but in the end his 139 from 116 balls was trumped by six balls of nerveless discipline from England’s rawest recruit, Luke Wright. His solitary over of the innings – his third in four international matches to date – resulted in six thrifty runs and the game’s pivotal dismissal, as England snatched an incredible tie from the jaws of defeat to carry the five-match series into a decider at Christchurch on Saturday.In any ordinary match, How’s masterclass would have won the contest with a yawning chasm to spare. He batted throughout with a Test-class composure, and yet moved to his hundred from a mere 86 balls, cashing in on Napier’s short square boundaries with a series of shredding drives and emphatic pulls. England’s own efforts with the bat had been impressive – Phil Mustard made a career-best 83 from 74 balls as he added 158 for the first wicket with Alastair Cook, and Paul Collingwood latched onto six leg-side sixes in an England-record 24-ball fifty – but all the while that How was easing New Zealand towards their target, their efforts paled to insignificance.With seven overs remaining, New Zealand needed a fraction more than a run a ball with seven wickets still standing. It was looking like a done deal – not least because the same team, 12 months previously, had twice chased 340-plus scores to beat the mighty Australians. From Jesse Ryder’s pugnacious opening salvo of 39 from 32 balls, via Brendon McCullum’s gutsy 58 from 65 and a run-a-ball 48 from Ross Taylor, New Zealand had demonstrated the firepower and the willpower to win. James Anderson bowled a succession of long-hops to concede 61 runs from his first six overs, and England’s lack of a specialist fifth bowler was causing an over-reliance on the ineffectual offspin of Owais Shah.But then, suddenly, something clicked within the England mindset. Scott Styris, on 20 from 17 balls, lashed their best bowler, Ryan Sidebottom, down Anderson’s throat at long-on, and one over later, the disastrously out-of-form Peter Fulton ran himself out for a four-ball duck as he chipped and charged to a pumped-up Kevin Pietersen at mid-on. The dangerous Jacob Oram punctured the off-side ring with a fierce drive in the next over, from Stuart Broad, but then picked out Pietersen at short cover with his next shot. Three prime wickets had fallen in consecutive overs, and with 25 needed from 24 balls, a sense of vertigo began to set in for the New Zealanders.Back came Anderson for his final two-over burst. Suddenly his length was full and menacing, and backed up with a hint of reverse-swing, he conceded a meagre two runs in his ninth over to lift the requirement to a daunting 23 from 18. Though Daniel Vettori connected with a scythe over mid-on, the equation was still fractionally in England’s favour when Wright was thrown the ball on a whim by his captain. There was no planning involved in the hunch – England in their desperation had been forced to bowl out their big guns early, but Wright was confident after producing an effective innings of 24 from 13 balls, and it showed.

Phil Mustard: on the rampage © Getty Images
 

He did nothing more than bowl six consecutive wicket-to-wicket deliveries, but with no room to swing their arms, New Zealand’s batsmen were forced to take on the ground fielders. Pietersen missed by inches from midwicket with How stranded, but one ball later Anderson – who was superb in the field – did not. How had to turn back after Vettori’s drive went straight to the man, and he carried on walking as his stumps were pinged down from ten yards.And so it all came down to the very last ball. Vettori was on strike, although he arguably should not have been there at all, after the third umpire failed to notice that his bat had been in the air during an earlier run-out referral. Wright kept it full and straight once again, and a cramped shot squirted out to point. A direct hit would have given the match to England, but the shy slipped past the stumps and so the spoils were shared. As he left the field, Collingwood admitted he didn’t know whether to laugh or cry, but there’s little doubt that, after the devastation at Hamilton, England would happily have accepted a win and a tie in their next two games.England did, however, have their eyes on a bigger prize at the start of today’s game, and by the interval, Vettori was doubtless pondering the wisdom of bowling first. England’s sizeable total might have been very different had McCullum behind the stumps held onto the simplest of edges off Chris Martin, when Cook had made just 2 from 14 balls. The opportunity, however, went begging, and Cook joined Mustard in England’s biggest stand of the series.The main source of England’s mayhem was Mustard, who allied power with patience and even some delicate touch play in his most convincing innings to date. It was the brutality of his cutting and square driving that really caught the eye, and set the tone for the day. Vettori was running out of options as the stand entered the 27th over of the innings, so he tossed the ball to the innocuous seamer, Ryder. But, in a remarkable maiden ODI over, he removed both men in quick succession – Mustard to a flat smack to wide long-on, and Cook to a perfect wicket-to-wicket seamer that nipped through bat and pad to rattle middle stump. Perhaps it was the memory of that intercession that prompted Collingwood’s last-ditch gamble. Either way, part-time medium-pacers are the toast of Napier tonight.

Bhatia leads the way for Tamil Nadu on opening day

After a rather innocuous outing in the last round against Kerala,Hyderabad came up against a rather rock solid Tamil Nadu batting lineup in their South Zone Ranji Trophy match at the Neuclear Fuel Complexground at Hyderabad on Wednesday. Helped by a fine century by openerRajat Bhatia, the visitors were 273 for 2 when stumps were drawn onthe opening day.Opting to bat, Tamil Nadu were provided with a commendable 184 runopening stand by Sridharan Sriram (98) and Rajat Bhatia (132 not out)in 51.4 overs. Bhatia was more the sedate partner prefering to playthe sheet anchor role. The hosts though toiling long and hard wereunsuccessful as the duo took the Tamil Nadu into lunch with the scoreline reading 125/0. The two stayed on till late afternoon and beforelong took the partnership to nearly 200.Just two runs short of a well deserved century, Sriram became thefirst casualty for the day in the 52nd over. Sriram found himselfstruggling to regain his crease as the wicketkeeper M Srinivas whippedoff the bails to run him out. In a 206 minute stay at the crease thesouthpaw, who relished displaying his strokes, took just 158 ballswhile managing to find the signboards on 13 occasions.Then Badrinath (15), who replaced Sriram lasted for just 39 balls anddeparted for a catch to Raju off NP Singh. But his partner RajatBhatia, found ample company in Sridharan Sharath (23 not out) andduring the unbeaten 55 run stand they took the score past the 250 runmark. Bhatia in the course of his 360 minute stay at the centre has sofar faced 263 balls and found the boundary rope 14 times.

Marsh questions value of boycott

Geoff Marsh believes Zimbabwe would be very competitive had they kept their best players © Getty Images

Geoff Marsh, the former coach of Zimbabwe, said cancelling Australia’s tour later this year would have little effect on Robert Mugabe’s regime and action should be taken in areas besides sport. Marsh said Zimbabweans were passionate about cricket but their country had been turned into “a living hell”.”The feeling I get – and it’s the opinion of some of my Zimbabwean mates as well – is what difference will stopping a cricket tour make?” Marsh said in the . “Whether it’s the right or wrong thing to do is another matter, but, in real terms, I just wonder what it will achieve.”I generally don’t like to see sport and politics mix. I think strong action definitely needs to be taken but I think it has to happen in areas broader than just sport. It is a beautiful country that has become a living hell for a lot of people.”Marsh, who was in charge of the side from 2001 to 2004, said the exodus of Zimbabwe’s top players was unfortunate for cricket in the country. “It’s a sad situation,” he said. “People there love the game. We filled the grounds there quite a few times, and you have to think that had they kept their key players, they would probably be a pretty competitive team.”Marsh’s comments came as Cricket Australia met with Australia’s foreign minister, Alexander Downer, to discuss whether to cancel or go ahead with the tour. The government has repeatedly said it does not want the trip to proceed and will pay any ICC fine imposed on CA.

Pakistan unhappy with appointment of Procter

Nasim Ashraf: ‘This is a wrong impression that Pakistan has no voice in the ICC’ © Getty Images
 

The Pakistan Cricket Board is unhappy with the appointment of Mike Procter for the five-match one-day series against Bangladesh, starting on April 8.Nasim Ashraf, the PCB chairman, said the board will talk to the International Cricket Council regarding this issue. “I will have our director (cricket operations) speak to his counterpart in the ICC on this issue,” Ashraf said.PCB’s reluctance to have Procter be the match referee in Pakistan matches has its origins in the infamous 2006 Oval Test where Australian umpire Darrell Hair’s five-run penalty culminated in a forfeiture.Ashraf did not see Pakistan as a weak member of the ICC even though the world governing body reinstated Hair into its Elite Panel. “This is a wrong impression that Pakistan has no voice in the ICC,” he said. “That is not true. Let me tell you in clear words that Hair will not officiate in our matches even though the ICC has reinstated him.”The ICC allowed Hair back because he had completed a six-month rehabilitation process and all the concerned people gave him good reports for his improvement in man management. Hair has been a top umpire as far as his decisions are concerned, but he was sidelined because of his poor management skills.”

Polished Australia compound Sri Lanka's misery

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Mitchell Johnson claimed his first Test wicket in front of his home crowd at the Gabba as Australia continued to apply the squeeze (file photo) © Getty Images

Australia’s new era continued to look much like their old one as they dominated mercilessly at the Gabba for a third day, forcing Sri Lanka to follow-on a massive 340 runs behind. The visitors then lost both openers Sanath Jayasuriya and Marvan Atapattu to complete a miserable day.Ricky Ponting has been prone to batting again to give his bowlers a rest, so his decision to make Sri Lanka follow on may have raised a few eyebrows, but it was not entirely unexpected. Sri Lanka, with the odd exception, haven’t batted well all tour and they were well behind when their first innings closed.It was an innings notable for Mitchell Johnson’s first Test wicket and Brett Lee’s 4 for 26, while Stuart MacGill nudged closer to 200 Test victims after eventually breaking through in the final session following some excellent, but hitherto unrewarded, toil. He will begin day four needing one more for the milestone.Wickets, though, didn’t come as easily as the scoreline may suggest. The bowlers certainly found it hard work on a pitch that remained good for batting, but once they had prised out the big guns by tea, the tail folded shortly after the break.Stuart Clark opened the day by finding the captain Mahela Jayawardene’s edge in the third over, but the biggest cheers were reserved for Johnson’s first Test wicket, that of Thilan Samaraweera. Johnson may have had to wait a year to make his debut, after being 12th man for the entire Ashes series, but he needed only eight overs to open his account, angling across the batsman with good pace and bounce, inducing a prod and sparking celebrations.Atapattu then took root and played out a battling 51, compiled over 183 deliveries. His great powers of concentration had flickered with a pop back just short of Lee, but they finally gave out when he pulled Johnson uppishly to Michael Clarke.Chamara Silva’s quickfire 40 brightened up play, although he dodged two bullets before falling, with two drops off MacGill – Adam Gilchrist on 13, and Clarke off a pull on 20. Silva batted like a man who wasn’t aware his team were 4 for 65 when he came in. He blazed here, he flashed there, and at last there was some of the spark and aggression that Sri Lanka had promised coming into the series. He finally sent one slash too many, off Stuart Clark over to Clarke, who made no mistake this time at wide short third man, having just been moved there by Ponting.Sri Lanka soon reverted to defence mode, eschewing the singles, as Australia’s hungry attack clamped down with tight lines and lengths. Then came the post-tea procession where they lost 4 for 30.Farveez Maharoof was bowled by Andrew Symonds before the new ball was due, with MacGill then bowling the left-hander Chaminda Vaas for 8, clipping the rough as it spun back in to him and took middle stump. MacGill was particularly impressive around the wicket, landing the wrong’un well and often deceiving the batsmen. Over the wicket, he allowed them room to cut.Three balls after Lee had taken the new ball, he trapped Prasanna Jayawardene on 37 with a full delivery on off which swung late. Lee made it four when Dilhara Fernando straight-pulled to Johnson for a comfortable catch at mid-on.Atapattu then found himself back out in the middle, two hours after Johnson had dismissed him. He and Jayasuriya added a solid 53 for the first wicket before he gloved one down leg off a jubilant Symonds. Jayasuriya played with his usual flair before departing just before stumps to bring up Lee’s fifth wicket of the match, edging to first slip where Ponting gratefully accepted following another good decision to bring Lee back on.The day finished with Australia’s tails up and Sri Lanka’s heads down and it will take something remarkable for the visitors to salvage anything from this match, as they still trail by 260 runs. Australia, meanwhile, will return on Sunday with the chance to wrap up the series opener inside four days.

Injury scares for Bell and Trott

England will ponder their batting options with Ian Bell in doubt © Getty Images

A groin injury has sidelined Ian Bell ahead of England’s upcoming Twenty20 internationals against West Indies starting Thursday. Bell picked up the injury during fielding practice on Monday and will continue to be assessed.”Ian Bell underwent an ultrasound scan today [Tuesday] and has a minor grade one tear to his left groin following fielding practice,” the England Cricket Board (ECB) announced. “He’ll continue to be assessed.”Meanwhile batsman Jonathan Trott, one of the new faces in the squad, too suffered an injury scare when he hurt his left hand while batting in the nets. The ECB added that the results of the X-ray would be announced on Wednesday.England play two back-to-back Twenty20 games at the Oval starting Thursday, followed by three one-day internationals against West Indies beginning July 1 at Lord’s.