Future of West Indies academy in doubt

Fidel Edwards benefitted from the West Indies academy, but others might not get the chance© Getty Images

As if West Indies cricket is not beset by enough sponsorship problems already, there is now growing concern for the future of the Grenada-based West Indies Cricket Academy, which has been instrumental in developing the careers of such players as Ryan Hinds, Carlton Baugh, and Fidel Edwards, but now faces closure because of a funding shortfall.Last year the multinational oil giants, Shell, decided to terminate their sponsorship of the academy, which is based at the St George’s University in South-West Grenada. The academy had been regarded as one of the few remaining success stories in West Indian cricket, with an annual three-month programme that was designed to produce a more rounded cricketer in terms of technique, fitness, personal development (including literacy, media and money management) and mental skills.Now, however, the programme is in strife, and the Academy co-ordinator, Rudi Webster, is at a loss as to whether it has a future at all. "We have got a contract with the [West Indies] board until the end of 2005,” Webster said in an interview with CMC Sport, "but … we haven’t had anything in writing from them whether the Academy is going to continue or not."Webster, a former team manager and psychologist with the senior squad, told the Trinidad Express that his team was ready to take the next batch of students. "I hope some time soon, somebody will take up a pen and paper or send us some correspondence saying that the Academy is on or the Academy is off. We are prepared to start if they want to continue, if they don’t want to continue we are happy with that too."

Disputants reach consensus on Indian board elections

Will Sharad Pawar throw his hat into the ring for a second straight year? © Getty Images

The decks have been cleared for holding the adjourned Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Board of Control for Cricket in India at Kolkata before November 30. The disputants arrived at a consensus on a six-point terms of reference for TS Krishnamurthy, former chief election commissioner, who will be the observer for the elections.A Supreme Court Bench, comprising Justice BP Singh, Justice SB Sinha and Justice PK Balasubramanyan, has recorded the draft notes of the discussion that led to the consensus between the disputing parties. Within a week after the elections the observer would send his report to the Supreme Court with brief reasons for his ruling on voting rights and on the thorny issue of eligibility / disqualification. The Bench has posted the matter for further orders on December 12.The dispute on the BCCI elections came up before the Supreme Court after the Netaji Cricket Club (NCC), Chennai, and the cricket associations of Rajasthan and Bihar had challenged the Calcutta High Court’s verdict removing two former chief justices of India as observers to the elections that were deferred in late September. The incumbents, including Ranbir Singh Mahendra, president of the BCCI, have Jagmohan Dalmiya as their patron, while the opposing faction that includes the likes of IS Bindra and Raj Singh Dungarpur, both former presidents, are rooting for Sharad Pawar, central government minister and political heavyweight.Senior advocates KK Venugopal and Soli Sorabjee, appearing for the BCCI, and senior advocate Harish Salve on behalf of NCC and the associations of Rajasthan and Bihar, appraised the Bench on the details of the consensus.While there was agreement on who the neutral observer should be, the parties could not intially agree on continuing with the adjourned AGM at Kolkata. The Bench had to intervene and rule in favour of Kolkata as the venue. As of now, the disputants have evaded the contentious issue as to which board – Bihar or Jharkhand – had the right to vote.An important aspect of the consensus was that in case of a dispute in the AGM, no court other than the Supreme Court will entertain any lawsuit or legal proceedings. The parties also agreed that the AGM would not be adjourned without the consent of the observer and his function will be confined to the election alone, and that the rest of the agenda items will be taken up after the conclusion of the elections and declaration of the result.The proceedings at the AGM will be recorded, both in the form of video and audio under the supervision of the observer, and he would make a copy available to the Supreme Court, the draft note submitted to the court said. It said that all questions arising as to the validity of votes or the disqualification or the eligibility of any candidate to any post would be decided by the observer in accordance with the BCCI’s Rules and Regulations.”Not only the documents relating to disqualification of candidates or nominees but also any votes held to be invalid would be placed in a separate envelope,” the draft agreement said.

Elliott and Sangakkara help World XI level series

Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary

Nathan Astle produced a fine hundred but New Zealand eventually went down by three wickets at Wellington© Getty Images

The inclusion of Matthew Elliott and Andy Bichel boosted the FICA World XI as they completed a three-wicket victory over New Zealand in the second match of the three-match series at Wellington’s Westpac Stadium.After taking a battering in the first encounter, when lack of familiarity as a unit and jetlag cost them, the World XI scripted a splendid comeback with Elliott and Bichel leading the way. Bichel snapped up three wickets and clattered 37 in quick time at the end of the game while Elliott set the platform with a steady 57 off 67 balls.New Zealand too put in a strong batting performance with Nathan Astle getting them off to a flier before going on to make a superbly-controlled 109 not out. Astle lost partners at regular intervals and was forced to change the rate of scoring as New Zealand ended with 256 for 9, a total they would have surely been dissatisfied with.Stephen Fleming wasn’t able to recapture his blistering form that he displayed at Christchurch, and fell cheaply for only 14. Mathew Sinclair made 30 before perishing to Lance Klusener. Chris Cairns was elevated to No.4 but Klusener andShane Warne, the World XI captain, thwarted his attacking intent with some clever field placements and it eventually resulted in his dismissal, caught at close cover, for just 9. Hamish Marshall followed for 6 and it took a typically bullying innings from Craig McMillan, who carted 33 off 35 balls, to lift New Zealand past 250.Both Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan were unable to weave their magic but it was Bichel who shone for the World XI. He took 3 for 56 from his 10 overs and and his crucial triple strike, when he nailed Brendon McCullum for a duck before dismissing both Astle and Jeff Wilson, frustrated New Zealand at a point when they were preparing to launch the assault.

Andy Bichel: shone with both bat and ball© Getty Images

Warne had earlier suggested that 250 would be gettable for the team batting second and Elliott and Nick Knight, who added 65 for the opening partnership, began the pursuit in rapid fashion. But they soon slumped to 111 for 3 and it got worse when Graeme Hick was trapped lbw to Daniel Vettori for 24. Jonty Rhodes had the misfortune of being run out while attempting a third run with Kumar Sangakkara, his partner, blocking his path.Sangakkara, though, went on to score 51 in what was a vital contribution and helped swing back the momentum. He was undone by an excellent diving catch by Hamish Marshall, turning and catching the ball over his shoulder, but Bichel and Chaminda Vaas charged towards the finish line as the World XI won with 13 balls to spare.The series decider will be in Hamilton on Wednesday with $739,189 already in the coffers as New Zealand Cricket got closer to achieving their target of $1million mark.Meanwhile Paul Wiseman has been included in the New Zealand squad for the third match after Daniel Vettori was ruled out with a back injury. The injury will be given 48 hours to settle before it is reassessed, after which time a course of action and appropriate treatment will be determined.

Dave Orchard among Australia's national umpires

Dave Orchard: the start of a new innings© Getty Images

Dave Orchard is among six umpires named by Cricket Australia in their national panel for the 2004-05 season. The 55-year-old Orchard represented South Africa in the ICC’s elite panel and has officiated in 44 Tests – including two matches in the recently concluded series between Sri Lanka and Australia – and 107 one-day internationals. However, he has been an Australian resident for the past seven years and is expected to be granted Australian citizenship soon. His contract with the ICC ended earlier this year.The appointment makes Orchard eligible to officiate in Pura Cup, ING Cup, and national second XI competitions, and also in some international fixtures like Australia A games and tour matches.A left-handed batsman and a right-arm medium-fast bowler, Orchard scored 1634 runs and took 47 wickets in a first-class career which lasted 11 years, before he took to umpiring. Over the years, he gained a reputation for being among the less conservative umpires, often giving batsmen out lbw when they stretched forward to spinners without offering a stroke.Orchard’s exit means that Rudi Koertzen is the only South African currently in the elite panel. Meanwhile, Australia have three of them – Darrell Hair, Daryl Harper and Simon Taufel – while three more, Steve Davis, Peter Parker and Bob Parry, are in the international panel. The international panel umpires are allowed to officiate in one-day internationals, and can also, if required, provide back-up to the elite panel by officiating in Tests during the peak season.

Hoggard: 'It's my biggest challenge'

Matthew Hoggard: refreshed and ready for the challenge © Getty Images

While England’s one-day cricketers were being tonked all around the subcontinent in the ICC Champions Trophy, one key member of the Ashes squad that departs for Australia tonight was enjoying a well-earned break from the grind. In three weeks’ time, Matthew Hoggard will be leading England’s attack in the first Test at Brisbane, but for the past month he has been quite content to enjoy his home comforts.Walks across the moors with his dogs, Billy and Molly, home-cooked breakfasts, and best-man duties at Chris Silverwood’s wedding have been some of the pleasures he has had to pass his time. “I’ve actually had quite a few weddings to go to over the past couple of weeks,” he told Cricinfo in the hours before his departure. “It’s that one time of the season when cricketers can get married, so they always seem to ram them in on top of each other.”It’s been an enviably chilled-out time, as his toiling team-mates will doubtless point out as they reconvene this evening. But come Sunday afternoon, when the squad touches down in Sydney, Hoggard knows that he’ll need to warm up quickly. “It’s going to be a massive challenge,” he admitted. “Going over to Australia to take on the best side in the world on their home soil, it’s one of the biggest challenges in any cricketer’s career.”It’s definitely the biggest thing for me,” he added. “The last series [in 2005] was the most exciting series that any of the players on either side had ever played in, and many people say it’s the greatest Test series ever played. It could be very hard to live up to the exciting finishes and the tension of those last five games, but I’m sure it’s going to be a close-run thing.”Test cricket is a test of skill, you’ve got to play well over five days to beat the opposition,” added Hoggard, reiterating his stated preference for the longer version of the game. “In one-day cricket you can have an off-day, the other side can have a good day and get a couple of freak dismissals, and you’ve got yourself an upset. In Test cricket you can pull yourself back into games, even if you can’t go on to win them. In one-day cricket there’s no way of holding on for the draw.”

“It’s just a red thing that you wang down the field and hope to land in the right areas” © Getty Images

There was a time, not so long ago, when Hoggard would have been classified as a typical toiling Yorkshire and England seamer; at home at Headingley but at sea when the conditions weren’t in his favour. But some of his greatest personal triumphs, from Christchurch to Nagpur via Johannesburg, have come in overseas Tests, using the same Kookaburra balls that will be used in the forthcoming series.”Everywhere in the world uses Kookaburra balls, every winter we’ve used a Kookaburra, and I’ve spent four seasons in South Africa using Kookaburras. I know what to do and know what to expect. At the end of the day, it’s just a red thing that you wang down the field and hope to land in the right areas.”For Hoggard, there will be mixed emotions as he arrives back in Australia. On the last tour in 2002-03, uncertain of his role in the side, he toiled on the true Australian wickets and failed to take a wicket in the series opener at Brisbane, where Matthew Hayden in particular took a liking to his offerings. “I find it hard to remember what happened last time,” he shrugged. “This time, I’ll be going over there a different bowler and hopefully with different expectations.”Those expectations are certainly different where Hayden is concerned. After his successes in 2002-03, Hayden was a walking wicket for the sharp end of the 2005 campaign, falling cheaply to Hoggard in three of the first four Tests, before grinding his way back to form with a gutsy 138 at The Oval. “He’s a quality batsman, and he’s phenomenal when he’s in form,” said Hoggard with relish. “It’ll be an interesting battle up-front and one I’m quite looking forward to.”Another battle that is eagerly awaited is that between Glenn McGrath and the England top-order. Last summer, Hoggard suggested that McGrath, at 35, was “over the hill” – a comment that came back to haunt him when McGrath sent five wickets scattering in the space of 28 balls at Lord’s. “He’s not a spring chicken, but he’s still a quality bowler,” Hoggard conceded this time around. “But whatever happens, Shane Warne is going have a big influence on the series. He took 40 wickets at 19 [last time], so he must be doing something right.”England’s last visit to Brisbane is remembered mainly for Nasser Hussain’s decision to bowl first on winning the toss, and Hoggard was adamant that the same mistake would not be made again. “I think the grass will have to be three foot high before Andrew [Flintoff] tosses up and wins the toss and elects to bowl,” he laughed. “A lot of water has flowed under the bridge since then, but I don’t think it matters who’s captain, when you have 15-16 people on tour all pushing for the same outcome.”I’ll be older and wiser, and you can’t replace experience,” he added. “But I think other teams that have gone over to Australia in the past have had had mental scars from being beaten before. They didn’t believe they could come over and win a Test match over there. We’ve got a relatively young squad, everyone has the knowledge that we can beat Australia, and we’ll be going out there to give them a run for their money.”

North gives Westerns edge over South

South Australia 0 for 13 trail Western Australia 335 (North 130*) by 322 runs
ScorecardMarcus North scored a unbeaten 130 to carry Western Australia to a handy first-innings total on a scorching opening day of their Pura Cup match against South Australia at Adelaide. After winning the toss, WA racked up 335 in its first innings, with SA closing on 0 for 13 in reply.It was an important toss to win as Mike Hussey sent South Australia out to bat in near-40 degree heat, with strong winds, dust storms and a cruelly flat batting track to contend with. But WA failed to capitalise early on, with Scott Meuleman suicidally run out for 5, before Mark Cleary picked up the wickets of Hussey (28) and Chris Rogers (17). At 3 for 75, SA had taken the early honours.But that brought North to the crease, and with Murray Goodwin continuing his superb form, the pair added 81 for the fourth wicket, before Goodwin was caught behind, slashing at a short wide ball off Shaun Tait, for 55. It prompted a mid-innings slump from WA that was only halted by a defiant 76-run stand for the ninth wicket with Aaron Heal (33).”Up until tea we were a little bit disappointed with the way we’ve played,” admitted North. “We obviously won the toss and batted first on a pretty good batting wicket, so it was important that we got a score over 300. From the position we were in we’ll be happy to take 330 and we’ve just got to bowl well tomorrow.”North brought up his century with an edge past the slips off Paul Rofe, as SA took the new ball to bring about a swift end to the innings. But the move backfired as North embarked on a scoring spree. His last 30 runs came off 24 balls, including four fours, as well as a six over midwicket off the allrounder Mick Miller.The pick of SA’s bowlers was Cleary who took 3 for 43, and afterwards he was content with his side’s efforts. “We could have closed them down 70 or 80 runs short of what they got,” he admitted, “but then again 335 wasn’t too bad a day for us, it was a good batting wicket, so we’ll take that.”

Where next to conquer?

Cricket is a hard sell and takes time and effort to assimilate. But as the administrators map out their plans for the New World they must not forget the pastIt was said of Mikhail Gorbachev that his flair was for walking backwards into the future. Cricket shares that talent. Coping with the present has been hard enough, without worrying about what’s been round the corner.The period in which Wisden Cricket Monthly was founded was a rare instance otherwise. Having been elaborately repackaged and modernised in Australia during the intrusion of Kerry Packer’s World Series, cricket arrived in the 1980s a few months early, having been gifted a market for games in a day, in a night, in eye-catching colours and tri-cornered tournaments, with more pizzazz for television, greater rewards for players and advertisements between overs to bankroll both.Two dozen years later, cricket finds itself in another bout of serious forethought, led this time by the ICC. The ICC is finding that the earlier revolution wrought most of the more obvious changes and its activities have so far involved more of the same: more cricket, more television, more marketing, more money. The next wave of reform will be more fundamental, redesigning cricket for a rising generation of sports consumers and priming it for pastures new.Some years ago I was at an Australian Cricket Board function as the chairman Denis Rogers unfolded a vision of a globalised game. With great solemnity and ceremony he announced that Australia, as part of its ICC remit, would be taking cricket to China. One imagined a Lord’s war cabinet with a world map on the wall: “OK Australia, you take China; India, Asia; England, South America. The rest of you, spread out. Meet you back here in 20.”Extending cricket’s sphere of influence was never going to be that easy, for three interwoven reasons. Its initial spread was as an Imperial game. Its success sprang from its capacity to serve both colonial and nationalist ends, to be a means for the payment of homage and for the expression of independence. In post-colonial times it is drained of that meaning: it becomes simply a game to win, drawing its prestige from money and marketing. Invoking the riots at Lambing Flat, the goldfields scene of the worst anti-Chinese riots in Australian history in 1861, would only get you so far in building a Sino-Australian sporting rivalry.This throws the stress back on to the game itself. And, let’s be honest: much as we all love it, cricket is a hard sell. “No thanks,” said the pretty girl that RC Robertson-Glasgow, with “misplaced kindness”, once invited to a game. “Nothing ever happens at cricket; it is just all waiting.” Of course, it only seems to be – but she had a point. Cricket takes a long time. It can look spectacular, but isn’t designed for spectacle. It can entertain, but isn’t calibrated as an entertainment. The complexity and eccentricity of its tenets and techniques are not welcoming; many of its dottier rituals seem superfluous.Five-day cricket, regarded by those who know as the game’s paramount variant, is a particularly fiendish form in which to interest the uninitiated. A weak international football team can thwart strong opposition by throwing everyone behind the ball, aiming to grit out 90 minutes for a scoreless draw, and might even get an upset goal against the run of play; a weak Test XI, with 1,800 minutes of available time, will always get thrashed. As they are at present.Cricket, in other words, takes a bit of effort to assimilate: it’s the party you realise is great after an hour in the kitchen surviving the shock of seeing three ex-girlfriends on arrival, when you find there is heaps of beer in the bath and you know the songs they are playing. Many of the game’s subtlest and most confounding aspects, furthermore, are intrinsic to it. Change them for the sake of broader appeal and you endanger not merely the goodwill of the existing community but the very qualities that distinguish cricket from other games.It might be more helpful to render meaningful what is already there. There is nothing like seeing others enjoying a game, however strange, to encourage you to join in. At the moment there does not seem a lot of enjoyment going round. “International cricket feels flat, undramatic, even dull,” complained Scyld Berry in these pages a year ago. “Everyone is playing too much. Australia’s pre-eminence in the Test and one-day game has become predictable … `Cricket goes in cycles’ is an adage that only a fool will cling to.”Having shrugged off its amateur past, of course, cricket must bear a certain burden of professionalised tedium. It has spent its inheritance of great players who learned their cricket the old-fashioned way, rising through the established grades and playing at state, county and provincial level before higher honours. The generation that succeeded them, streamed into youth teams and academies as well as the first-class game, have been raised with different expectations: knowing that cricket could be their living, they’ve never needed to live for cricket. If the game today seems more routine, perhaps that should not surprise us. Has anyone paid money to watch you work lately?What can we say, then, about a quarter-century of professional international cricket? The trade-off was a necessary and unavoidable one: cricket could not withstand the tide of sporting commercialism. Television and sponsors had re-priced all games and the remuneration of players could not stand still. But, for players, it was only a partial emancipation. The attitude of boards of control since Packer has been an unconscious observance of Alfred Hitchcock’s advice regarding actors: “Pay them heaps and treat them like cattle.” And some heaps have been taller than others.It was this climate of mistrust and cynicism that smoothed the path to malpractice. When Sir Paul Condon’s anti-corruption unit reported to the ICC on match-fixing in May 2001, it noted that players were “not sufficiently involved in the administration of the game and ownership of the problems”. While the ICC does not have a great record taking advice from others, one might have thought it could take its own.Administrators have fared badly believing in cricketers’ worst instincts; it might be more fruitful appealing to their better natures.One would be even more emphatic about this had professional not become so pregnant with meaning. It suggests diligence, dedication, attention to detail, as in “professional qualification”, but it also implies contrivance, conspiracy and sleazy expedient, as in “professional foul”. Cricket is witnessing both: we have what might be called “professional appeals”, displays of calculated intimidation and petulance bearing no relation to the matter for adjudication, even “professional catches”, like the one for which Sourav Ganguly remarkably escaped censure during the World Cup final. These displays are not evidence of an overabundance of high spirits, or of being supremely tough and competitive: they’re just cheating. To make the most of the dividends of professionalism, players must confront some of its less appetising manifestations. It will not only be beneficial for the game; it will make the case for their influence in it unassailable.We are at a hinge moment in cricket’s history – a tipping point, to use the expression beloved of marketers and military men alike. A new age beckons; the trappings of the old are slipping away. But while cricket should not walk backwards into the future, the occasional glance over its shoulder might still be useful.Gideon Haigh is a Melbourne-based cricket writer and author.The Wisden Cricketer launches on September 19. Click here to subscribe.The September 2003 edition of Wisden Cricket Monthly is on sale at all good newsagents in the UK and Ireland, priced £3.40.

Political murder prompts greater security for SA squad

The already high security for the South African cricketers was further reinforced after the assassination of a religious leader prompted violent riots, with fears that the South African team could be targeted. Azam Tariq, a Sunni extremist leader and an MP, was murdered on Monday in Islamabad, an incident which has inflamed tensions between the Sunni and Shi’ite Muslim sects, especially in cities like Faisalabad where sectarian rivalries exist. South Africa are currently in Faisalabad to play the third one-day international.According to an AFP report, Sunni mobs rampaged through Jhang, Tariq’s hometown, where five Shi’ites were stabbed and their mosque set on fire, and in Islamabad, where a man was killed when a cinema was set alight by mourners at Tariq’s funeral. Around 3000 policemen and 150 commandos were deployed in and around Faisalabad’s Iqbal Stadium, where the ODI was being played, and along roads leading to the ground.”We have alerted police to avert any possible reaction on the incident,” Arif Rahim, the chairman of the series organising committee, told AFP. “We have electronic gates at all nine entrances to the stadium to scan all spectators before they enter.” Two commandos were posted outside both teams’ dressing-rooms. The South African team management refused to comment on the situation, saying that they were following the advice of their own security personnel travelling with the squad.South Africa initially cancelled their tour citing security worries after a bomnb-blast in Karachi, and only went ahead with a shortened trip after a revised itinerary was drawn up, in which the matches scheduled at Karachi and Peshawar – considered high-risk venues by South Africa – were shifted to safer venues.

Smith expected to recover for third Test

Graeme Smith, South Africa’s captain, is expected to recover from an injured hamstring to face West Indies in the third Test at Cape Town on Friday.Smith did not take the field on fourth day of the second Test at Durban in what was described as a “precautionary measure” by Shane Jabaar, the team physio, who is hopeful that Smith will be fit by Friday.If Smith is unable to play, Mark Boucher would take over the captaincy and Gary Kirsten would be the obvious choice to replace Smith at the top of the order. Meanwhile, Paul Adams is expected to be recalled at the expense of Andrew Hall.West Indies, on the other hand, have even more injury problems of their own. Chris Gayle is still suffering from a torn hamstring, while Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Corey Collymore are now also doubts.But Brian Lara has other things on his mind, namely the inconsistent West Indies bowling attack. “Your backs are against the wall when the team batting against you is scoring at four runs an over,” Lara said. “We’ve got to be able to pull things back and be more consistent in line and length.”South Africa (probable) 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 Herschelle Gibbs, 3 Jacques Rudolph, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 Gary Kirsten, 6 Neil McKenzie, 7 Mark Boucher (wk), 8 Shaun Pollock, 9 Paul Adams, 10 Makhaya Ntini, 11 Andre Nel.West Indies (from) Brian Lara (capt), Ramnaresh Sarwan, Chris Gayle, Wavell Hinds, Daren Ganga, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Dwayne Smith, Ridley Jacobs (wk), Carlton Baugh, Vasbert Drakes, Mervyn Dillon, Fidel Edwards, Ravi Rampaul, Adam Sanford, Dave Mohammed, Corey Collymore.

Bath Cricket Festival gets a helping hand from Spain!!

Chairman Robert Appleyard and his hard-working band of helpers at the Bath Cricket Festival are receiving an unexpected helping hand, from the non-cricketing nation of Spain.Maria Mediavilla, a 30 year old economics graduate from Palacios de la Sierra, near Burgos in northern Spain, was on a language course in Bath when she decided to fill in her spare time doing something “typically English”.She went to the Volunteer Bureau and saw notice inviting volunteers to get involved with the Bath Cricket Festival.Maria said: “I knew nothing about cricket, but I wanted to do something useful and to work with English people, so I thought that looks interesting, why not? I’ll try it.”She contacted Michael Davis, a member of the festival organising committee, and within a few weeks she had been co-opted onto the committee and was using her Spanish flair and business skills to organise a mailing shot and help with a number of festival fringe events.Among Maria’s projects has been the eve of festival reception on Tuesday evening, June 3, at the Hot Bath Gallery with tours of the Thermae Bath Spa complex.The festival itself begins the following day, Wednesday, June 4 on the Bath Recreation Ground when Somerset takes on Worcestershire in a four-day championship match and this will be followed by a one-day match between Somerset and Northamptonshire on Sunday June 8th.During the festival one of Maria’s tasks will be to ensure that corporate hospitality clients are happy with the facilities and services they have ordered.Maria said: “Hopefully, I will also see more of the cricket.”Until she came to Bath Maria had never seen the game. Committee members took her to Taunton to see Somerset play one of the season’s opening fixtures.Michael Davis said: “We did our best to explain what was happening and why there were no goal posts. She had a great time, and so did we. I think the social side of the game was something she had never expected.”Maria said: “It is a very complicated game, with many rules, and we have nothing like this in Spain. The game stops for tea and lunch and goes on for days and is very relaxing.”Another aspect of English life that surprised Maria was the existence of so many voluntary organisations, all doing good works.She said: “You can volunteer and take part, it’s open to all. It’s not like that in Spain. Here you can do something useful and have an experience and work with other people. You can get involved in marketing, fund-raising and many other things — even cricket!”Maria’s language course ends in June, but she hopes to stay a little longer. She has already worked abroad, at Constance in Germany, after graduating and the experience fed her wanderlust. She heard so much about England that she made that her next destination and came to Bath because she heard it was a good centre for language courses.

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