Otago go second, Auckland still top

Northern Districts‘ 313 was, astonishingly, not enough to stave off a charge by a rampant Canterbury, who hunted down the total with four balls to spare and five wickets in hand. Canterbury faced the huge total courtesy of Daniel Flynn’s 149 from 141 balls, but were handed a strong platform by Michael Papps’ 90. With eight balls to spare in Christchurch they brought up the 300, and four balls later the job was done. The bowling figures were nothing to write home about, only Shane Bond recording an economy of under five while Andrew Strauss missed out on the runfest with a duck.Centuries for Aaron Redmond and Alex Gidman in Dunedin, helped Otago leapfrog Central Districts into second as their 321 proved insurmountable. Warren McSkimming helped restrict the visitors with two wickets including that of topscorer Greg Hay.Auckland overhauled Wellington‘s 247 in Wellington in the final over to stay top. Lou Vincent set the platform with 72 and Rob Nicol added a fifty while Graham Napier’s four wickets were in vain.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Auckland 6 5 1 0 0 21 +0.612 1619/279.3 1554/300.0
Otago 6 4 2 0 0 16 +0.317 1467/285.3 1371/284.2
Central Dist 6 3 3 0 0 14 +0.270 1380/266.4 1353/275.5
Canterbury 6 2 4 0 0 9 -0.422 1424/285.3 1522/281.2
Wellington 6 2 4 0 0 9 -0.590 1356/288.4 1409/266.3
Northern Dis 6 2 4 0 0 8 -0.162 1571/300.0 1608/297.5

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.

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.

Worcestershire edge out Glamorgan

Worcestershire 117 for 5 beat Glamorgan 122 for 7 by four runs at New Road (D/L method)
Scorecard
Glamorgan missed their chance to overhaul Gloucester and Surrey at the top of Division One, after losing out to Worcestershire in a thrilling finish at New Road.In a match that had been decimated by rain, Worcestershire managed a meagre 117 for 5 in 18 overs, although they had been expecting to bat for 23 overs. The match had eventually begun under floodlights at 7.15pm, and when Anurag Singh and Vikram Solanki added 36 in five overs, a healthy total seemed likely.But Mike Kasprowicz dismissed Solanki for 20, and later added Graeme Hick and Andrew Hall, both for ducks. Only Ben Smith, who finished unbeaten on 43, was able to maintain the momentum.Glamorgan were set a revised target of 126, and though Mike Powell (33) and Matthew Maynard (32) made good headway, 10 runs from David Leatherdale’s final over proved too much. Glamorgan’s chase was severely hampered with 15 runs still needed, when Adrian Dale edged a Kabir Ali delivery into his face and was forced to retire hurt.

Murali's shoulder may need surgery

Murali’s shoulder might require surgery© Getty Images

Muttiah Muralitharan will miss the rest of South Africa’s tour of Sri Lanka, and could be a doubt for the ICC Champions Trophy in September as well after aggravating a shoulder injury that has left him needing urgent surgery. He will fly to Australia on Thursday night, and consult a surgeon on Saturday before deciding on a course of action.”We spoke to Dr David Young last night and Murali will be leaving forAustralia tonight to have surgery,” said Ajit Jayasekara, the team manager. “We hope to have the results back by Saturday and if all goes well Murali can return on Sunday.”CJ Clarke, Sri Lanka’s physio, gave a little more insight into the problem. “Murali has been having shoulder pains for months now,” he said. “He looks to be suffering from two problems, basic wear and tear of the shoulder joint and a build-up of fluid around a nerve, from overuse, which is not usually a serious condition. However, until we know what the surgeon has done we cannot speculate on how long he will be out of action.”If the fluid is drained and that relieves the pain then he could be back for the Champions Trophy, which is our aim at the moment. But if David Young decides to clean up the joint, or discovers something else that is wrong, then he could be out for longer.”Murali had been nursing a sore shoulder for many months, but prior tothe first Test at Galle he complained that the pain was worsening. He played in the Test, and took five wickets, but aggravated the injury.Sri Lanka had hoped that he would recover sufficiently to play in thesecond Test in Colombo, but an hour before the start of play they decided that the risks of playing him were too great. He was replaced by Rangana Herath, aleft-arm spinner.Murali went clear of Shane Warne at the top of the Test wicket-takers’ list during the Galle Teat before this latest setback.

Vaas warns of county burn-out

Chaminda Vaas blames county cricket for his hamstring injury © Getty Images

Chaminda Vaas has warned that county cricket is bad for fast bowlers. Vaas, who is an injury doubt for the one-day game against India on Saturday after straining a hamstring during the second Test against West Indies, has been a regular for Worcestershire this season, when international commitments have allowed.”For a batsmen it’s okay playing county cricket,” he told The Daily News in Sri Lanka. “You learn a lot of things and get a lot of opportunities. But for a fast bowler it is not easy. Two or three months is okay, but more than that I wouldn’t recommend.”Vaas is Sri Lanka’s second-highest wicket-taker in international cricket behind Muttiah Muralitharan, with 613 wickets in an 11-year career, but he has been feeling the strain in his season on the county treadmill. “”Out of seven days, we play five days of county cricket. I couldn’t train at all. That’s the reason I picked up the injury.””I am not sure whether I will play county cricket the next year or again as it is my concern for Sri Lanka cricket,” he added. “I want to play more for Sri Lanka. I would love to play for my country as long as I can so I will stick to what I can do.”

Ponting puts Australia one up

40.1 overs
Scorecard


Matthew Hayden kept his end up while Adam Gilchrist and Ricky Ponting blazed away
©Getty Images

Australia outclassed India with the ball and bat, and in the field, to register a thumping seven-wicket win in the first of the three finals of the VB Series. To their credit India fought hard, engineering a mini-recovery. At the end of the day, though, there was little to cheer about for Indian fans. The team will have to shrug off this loss in a hurry if they are to stretch Australia to a third final.The day began well for India, when Sourav Ganguly won the toss and chose to bat on a light-coloured dry pitch. From there on little went right. Australia’s fast bowlers, rejuvenated after a couple of games on the bouncy tracks of Perth, hit a perfect length. The batsmen had nothing to drive at and slowly but surely were pushed onto the back foot. From then on, the bowlers merely had to persist. Every now and then a ball did a bit extra, a batsman committed a mistake and the wickets fell.Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar both departed inside six overs. Sehwag fended Jason Gillespie awkwardly to Adam Gilchrist while Tendulkar played a half-cocked drive to a full one from Brett Lee and was bowled through the gate (2 for 14). Soon after, VVS Laxman (24) and Rahul Dravid were gone with the score on 48 and India were in deep strife. Each of the four Australian bowlers used – Gillespie, Lee, Williams and Harvey – had struck.Ganguly walked out to the wicket amidst a rain of short balls, no doubt ruing the way things turned out after he had decided to bat. He played and missed more than once, attempting pull shots that would have been more in place on a beach in the Caribbean than an international tournament final. In the event, he was put out of his misery soon enough, by the bowler least likely to get him, when he cut and edged Ian Harvey to the keeper. Yuvraj Singh had a breezy yet pleasant stay out in the middle, clipping two effortless boundaries. Then, he became the latest casualty, edging a full one from Lee to the keeper. At 6 for 76 India were dead and buried.Ajit Agarkar then wafted out like a refreshing breeze and hit the bowlers all around the park. The pressure of being so many down for so few seemed to act in reverse. After all, Agarkar had little to lose. His driving down the ground was crisp, his whips off the hip well-placed and his pull shot phenomenal. Hemang Badani, the last recognised batsman, watched in disbelief as a lesser batsman made light of the task at hand. Fortunately for India, Badani did not attempt to match Agarkar stroke for stroke. Instead he buckled down, brushed off the times he played and missed, and held up one end.Agarkar’s dramatic pull shot off Harvey, when he swiveled with the twirl of a ballerina and deposited a perfectly good ball over the stands at midwicket, was the highlight of a 102-run seventh wicket partnership that breathed life into the game. But even then, Agarkar’s breezy 53 (62 balls, 4 fours, 2 sixes) and Badani’s determined 60 not out (81 balls, 4 fours) could only take India to 222.When India came out to attempt a defense of 222, it was almost an impossible task. Yet, Agarkar and Lakshmipathy Balaji began well enough, sending down two tight overs. And then all hell broke loose. Gilchrist opened his shoulders and launched the kind of assault you need when you’re chasing 323 rather than 223. His bat came down fast and furiously with metronomic efficiency. Anything that was full, or wide, and preferably both, was dispatched with an arrogant air.Gilchrist (38, 20 balls, 7 fours) was particularly savage on Balaji early on. He crashed him for three boundaries in four balls, and had scored 18 runs from the first five balls of the over before he finally slipped up. Balaji came around the wicket, dug the ball in short and Gilchrist’s pull sailed high and handsome into Tendulkar’s hands at deep backward square leg (1 for 48).If India were happy to see the back of Gilchrist, the smiles were wiped off their faces by a rampant Ponting. He attacked the bowling from the moment he walked out to the middle, getting his eye in well against the medium-pacers before expanding his victims list to accommodate the spinners. His quicksilver footwork formed the basis for his clean hitting. He was not always to the pitch of the ball, but that hardly mattered as he drove on the up and through the line with sure hands. Small wonder that he was happy to walk when he edged one on 88 (80 balls, 7 fours, 2 sixes) with the score on 193.Balaji picked up three consolation wickets, including that of Hayden in unusual circumstances. Hayden drove uppishly at a slower ball and only managed a gentle scoop back towards the bowler. An apologetic appeal from Balaji was upheld by the third umpire. Hayden’s unusually restrained 50 (91 balls, 4 fours) formed the backbone of the 139-run partnership with Ponting for the third wicket. Suffice it to say it was more than enough to see Australia home.

Mark Greatbatch appointed Warwickshire coach

Warwickshire have announced that former New Zealand batsman Mark Greatbatch has been appointed as their new director of coaching on a three-year contract.Greatbatch, 42, who was already the director of Warwickshire’s academy, was previously coach of Central Districts before moving to the UK 18 months ago after becoming frustrated with the pay and lack of opportunity in New Zealand. He briefly took over coaching Giggleswick School in Yorkshire before moving to Edgbaston.Greatbatch played 41 Tests and 84 ODIs for New Zealand between 1988 and 1996.Dennis Amiss, Warwickshire’s chief executive said: “We are all delighted that Mark has accepted this position with the club, and we look forward to him moving the team and the club forward over the next three years”.

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.

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