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.

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.

Siddiqui claims five-fer for Maharashtra

A five-wicket haul from India seamer Iqbal Siddiqui helped Maharashtra reduce Saurashtra to 288 for nine on the opening day of the West Zone Ranji match between the two sides at the Nehru Stadium, Pune.The fact that most of the visiting batsmen failed to build on their starts after Maharashtra had put them in proved to be the former’s undoing. RV Dhruv who made 50 off 82 balls and opener PP Joshi who made 47 off 64 balls were the top two scorers for Saurashtra.For Maharashtra, Siddiqui, a left-arm seamer who made his Test debut for India in the recent Mohali Test, claimed 5 for 92, while Hrishkesh Kanitakar, claimed 2 for 41, with his gentle off-spinners. Suyash Burkul, the 20-year-old right-arm medium-pacer making his Ranji debut claimed the other wicket to fall on the day.Bahatule and Agarkar rescue MumbaiA 97-run seventh wicket partnership between Sairaj Bahatule and Ajit Agarkar saw the powerful Mumbai Ranji team recover to 286 for eight at the end of the first day of their Ranji four-dayer against Gujarat at the Sardar Vallabhai Patel stadium, Bulsar.Bahatule made 69 and Agarkar 34 to help the former Ranji champions gain some respectability after they had been reduced to 134 for six in the 45th over. An unbeaten 43-run partnership between Paras Mhambrey and Ramesh Powar then saw Mumbai end the day on a hopeful note.Most of Mumbai’s early woes were inflicted Gujarat’s right arm medium-pacer Shyamlal Bhatt who claimed the first four wickets to fall. He also returned later in the day to snare Ajit Agarkar to end up with excellent figures of 22-8-40-5. His fellow right-arm medium-pacer Lalit Patel provided admirable support claiming three for 56.

Hosts Andhra Cricket Association get the better of Indian Oil Corporation

Andhra Cricket Association skipper Amit Pathak won the toss andelected to bat first against Indian Oil Corporation in their fourthround clash. However, things did not go too well for them as theskipper was trapped in front of the stumps by left arm seamer ZaheerKhan. With just 23 on the board, LN Prasad Reddy and Gnaneshwara Raocame together and steered the hosts towards a good total. Prasad Reddycompiled a steady 59 (114 balls, 3 fours, 1 six) while Gnaneshwara Raopicked the bowlers off for runs.Rao made a 78 ball 60 that included two hits that cleared the ropesbefore being caught behind off Iqbal Siddiqui. The pair had takenAndhra Cricket Association to a position of relative stability, beforethey were separated with 140 on the board.Stumper MSK Prasad, recently discarded by the national selectors,cracked an unbeaten 39. Perhaps he was making a point or two to theselectors. Young all rounder Venugopal Rao missed a half century byjust 3 runs as he became Zaheer Khan’s second victim. The speedstermade it a 3 wicket haul when he got rid of YS Ranganath before hecould open his account.At the end of their allotted 50 overs, the Andhra Cricket Associationside had compiled a more than useful 249. This left Indian OilCorporation chasing 250 at an even 5 runs an over.They were however not up to the task. Despite a 100 plus partnershipfor the second wickets, Indian Oil Corporation could manage only 221.Promising young opener from Karnataka, Mithun Beerala helped himselfto 52 as Abbas Ali hurried to 51.After the fall of the Beerala and Ali, no one stayed at the wicketlong enough to score more than 36. Raj Mohan snared 3/48 and sawIndian Oil Corporation slip to a 28 run loss.

Manchester United dealt blow in striker chase

Manchester United will have to compensate both Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund to sign Robert Lewandowski, according to The Daily Star.

United would have to pay the Champions League winners to rip up their agreement with Lewandowski, before then paying Dortmund the striker’s transfer fee.

It was believed that Lewandowski agreed to join Bayern Munich last summer, but Dortmund have refused to sell the striker to their rivals, after already losing Mario Goetze to the Bundesliga champions.

That’s opened the door for United, who are looking at Lewandowski to possibly replace Wayne Rooney, who handed in a transfer request before the end of the season.

Dortmund are asking for £25.5million for the forward, despite him having just one year left on his contract. That fee won’t include the compensation that United would need to pay Bayern Munich.

But the Bavarian club could reject any compensation from United, which would open the door for Lewandowski to move to the Allianz Arena for free next summer.

United have been involved in a similar deal before and therefore know what it may take to seal the striker’s signature. After an incredibly confusing saga, John Obi Mikel had initially agreed to join Manchester United, but ended up moving to Chelsea after the Blues paid United £12million in compensation.

Mikel claimed he was pressured into signing a deal with United without his agent present but actually wanted to join the Blues.

United will be hoping they can sign Lewandowski before their pre-season tour of Asia, which starts with a friendly against Bangkok on July 13th.

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First session will be key, says Sangakkara

Kumar Sangakkara’s century gave Sri Lanka an outside chance © Getty Images

Kumar Sangakkara, whose magnificent unbeaten century has ensured Sri Lanka are still in the hunt in the second Test, admitted that the contest was not over yet.Sri Lanka set an improbable fourth innings target of 507 for victory finished the fourth day promisingly placed at 247 for 3. They require 260 runs with seven wickets in hand going into the last day to pull off an upset win and level the series.”You’ve got to be realistic that 507 is a massive ask. The direction in which we will go tomorrow is basically up to us,” Sangakkara said. “If we can get through to lunch without losing a wicket depending on the amount of runs we get it becomes a lot clearer.””I really don’t want to be a soothsayer and say what will happen tomorrow but we always go into the middle with a lot of belief and we try our best. The bounce is just starting to get lower it would be a bit of concern for the batters. Other than that it is pretty much straight line with the ball. They probably bowl very good reverse [swing] at the end but if we can get through that again, the batters coming in will back themselves and be confident to get runs on this track.”It would have been nice if we could have finished with one wicket or two wickets less. We were in a position to do that when Marvan [Atapattu] was batting pretty well, but we are still in it with a fight. We’ll see how the first session goes tomorrow, if we can fight through that without losing a wicket then the day will look much better.”Without the likes of Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath and a out of sorts Stuart MacGill whose 16 overs cost 93 runs without success, Australia depended heavily on the pace of Brett Lee. He obliged his captain with two successive wickets in one over getting rid of Atapattu and Mahela Jayawardene.”The period leading upto Marvan’s dismissal was probably one of the toughest that I’ve played with Brett running in and probably giving everything he had in that spell,” said Sangakkara. “Australia was desperate for a wicket and Ricky [Ponting] turned to him. He managed to deliver what was asked of him. That was a magnificent contest between bat and ball unfortunately Marvan lost out at that point.”One of the most enjoyable things was to be out there in a contest like that, battling it out and trying to get on top of a bowler like Brett. That was possibly the best passage of play of the Test match.”The batters will always feel a lot more confident against any side that does not have Warnie and McGrath. When they were playing the batters enjoyed the contest, but to be fair we know what we are up against. But it’s going to be one of those days where we try to bat all through an hour at a time and start reassessing every time we go through a tough period.”Sangakkara missed out on the first Test through a hamstring injury and showed how much the team missed him when he followed his first-innings knock of 57 with an unbeaten 109 today.” I was a bit more fluent in this innings than the first where I was scratching around a bit and had a lot of luck getting to 57. I was pretty cut up that I threw it away. It was a good enough start to go and get more runs. Mahela showed everyone how to apply themselves and bat on the track. This innings was getting to little landmarks like 20s and 30s forgetting about everything and battling through sessions and through tough bowling.”He admitted that the team was disappointed they could not help Muttiah Muralitharan get the nine wickets he required to break Warne’s record of 708 Test wickets. Muralitharan picked up just four wickets in the series conceding 400 runs.”We always have an enormous amount of love and respect for Murali. He is champion enough to understand that his efforts are to help the team win. We are very disappointed for him. He’s disappointed with himself but it’s not the end of the world for him.”He’s got many more years to go and he’s got three Tests coming up against England. The record for him is given. Unfortunately we couldn’t do it in Australia which would have probably been the ideal way for him to achieve it. Our focus was on trying to win a Test match and if we were going to focus entirely on the fact that this is Murali’s record that would have probably taken something away from the team focus.”

Ramesh impresses with ton

ScorecardSadagoppan Ramesh, the former Indian opener, impressed with 127 as Kerala ended the day at 223 for 6 against Railways at Delhi. Ramesh did the bulk of the scoring and was well supported by Sreekumar Nair, the captain, who contributed 34. Jai Prakash Yadav was yet again the most impressive bowler for Railways, picking up three wickets in his 21 overs.
ScorecardGoa wilted under Sanjay Pandey’s medium pace as his six-wicket haul bundled them out for 223 at Indore. Goa looked set for a big score at 92 for 1, led by Sagun Kamat’s half century, before Pandey struck back with three wickets in quick succession. The middle order failed to consolidate as Pandey and Abbas Ali wrapped up the innings in 78 overs. In reply, Madhya Pradesh lost the early wicket of Muddassar Pasha.
ScorecardAssam crawled to 205 for 8 against Vidarbha at Nagpur, pegged back by the spinners. Alind Naidu and Samir Khare shared five wickets between them, also restricting the scoring, as Khare gave away just 16 runs in his 12 overs. J Arunkumar looked set to score a half century but his dismissal, with the score at 118, triggered a mini collapse. Anand Katti was unbeaten at stumps with 41.
ScorecardShiv Sunder Das, the former Indian opener, made a welcome return to form with an unbeaten century against Jammu and Kashmir at Cuttack. Das’s watchful 126 piloted the innings, as Orissa ended in a good position at 248 for 3. Orissa ensured that they had the partnerships going, as Das added 78 for the third wicket with Subit Biswal, and later an unbeaten 61 with captain Pravanjan Mullick till stumps.
ScorecardRuns were hard to come by for Tripura as they were restricted to 205 for 8 against Jharkhand at Agartala. After being put in to bat, Tripura lost early wickets to seamers Sumit Panda and Rajkumar Yadav, and were at one stage 55 for 4. Subal Chowdury who scored 52, and Timir Chanda added 48 for the fifth wicket. Chanda remained unbeaten with a dogged 60, adding 66 with Rajesh Banik. Shahbaz Nadeem was the most effective bowler with figures of 3 for 48.
ScorecardAn aggressive 67 by Ajay Mannu lifted Himachal Pradesh to 255 for 8 against Services at New Delhi. Seamer Manish Jha and left-arm spinner Arun Sharma made early inroads, reducing Himachal to 100 for 4 before Mannu and Maninder Bisla added 51. Mannu and Mukesh Sharma added 81 for the sixth wicket before seamer Pankaj Kumar struck with three quick wickets towards the close.

Inzamam and Woolmer speak out

Bob Woolmer and Inzamam-ul-Haq are not just targeting individuals in the Indian side © Getty Images

As Pakistan prepare to take on India, both sides revitalised in recent months, in a series of considerable cricketing significance, both Bob Woolmer and Inzamam-ul-Haq were adamant that the entire Indian team and no one individual player will pose the greatest threat. Speaking at the press conference at Gaddafi Stadium before the first Test, scheduled to begin on Friday, Inzamam said, “There’s not been too much change in the Indian team from the last time they visited. They are an experienced team. They are all experienced batsmen and all capable of playing long innings. We have to work very hard to win this series and especially hard against their batting line-up.” Woolmer agreed, “All eleven Indian players are threats as will all our eleven. This will be a hard-fought series.”India’s batting line-up in particular will be a concern to Pakistan. As strong as it has been, it has also recently lengthened considerably with Irfan Pathan and Ajit Agarkar batting as low as number nine. Woolmer, however, was quick to point out that it isn’t a situation new to Pakistan. “All international sides have long batting orders now. Every team has to plan for that. Quite a lot of the time, the late order doesn’t get exposed to often to genuine spinners or fast bowlers. When they do, even they struggle.”The identity and composition of the Pakistan XI, for once, are the subject of little speculation. Inzamam confirmed noises from the camp in previous days that Shoaib Malik will open the innings, as he did against England. It means that Imran Farhat, recalled to the Pakistan squad after a year on the sidelines, will miss out on the opportunity to partner Salman Butt. Inzamam explained, “Regular openers are good but Malik has played well for us. In his innings against England, he stuck around and he has shown that he can play a long innings. He also gives us a big edge with his bowling.”There has been talk, over the last few days and in the build-up to the series, of the nature the pitch. Former players, among them Wasim Akram and Aaqib Javed had said Pakistan would do well to prepare seaming, bouncy tracks to combat India’s strong batting line-up. Nothing of the sort has happened and Inzamam was quick to dismiss any notion that the pitch was designed to suit his bowling attack. “It’s not a special wicket or anything. We have a wicket that is sporting and that helps everyone, fast bowlers, spinners and batsmen. Winning the toss will be an advantage obviously but I don’t think the wicket is such that the toss will make such a big difference.”Woolmer did point out, however, that spinners are likely to play a part at some stage in the proceedings. “Spinners will play a part especially if you look at the quality of those we have on tap here. Harbhajan Singh, Anil Kumble, Danish Kaneria, Shoaib Malik, Shahid Afridi are all going to have some say in a game of cricket. I think there is enough moisture in the air and underneath the ground to allow the ball to grip at some stage during the game. The ball will swing and seam as well and come onto the bat so some fantastic cricket can be played.”Unusually for Pakistan, the weather has also attracted undue attention in recent weeks. A colder than normal winter hasn’t helped preparations but as temperatures have steadily risen over the last day or so, Inzamam said his fast bowlers would benefit from it most. “The weather improving over the last couple of days is a good thing. It will help players in the game and spectators watching it as well. Mostly fast bowlers will benefit from the change in weather and I think Shoaib’s form and discipline is a good thing for the team in that sense.”Pakistan’s recent record at Lahore is promising; they have won the last four Tests at Gaddafi Stadium. That, however, said Inzamam is unlikely to play any role. “It doesn’t matter that we have won our last four tests here. It only matters that we perform well on the day and through the five days. Two years ago when we played India here our team was young and didn’t have that much experience of international cricket. They have that now, from playing in Australia and against England. We have learnt a lot from that and it is an advantage. We still want to improve more because there is still a lot of scope for improvement.”

'Warne is a negative bowler,' says Saleem Malik

Saleem Malik played over 100 Tests in a 21-year career© Getty Images

Saleem Malik, the former captain of Pakistan who is currently serving a lifetime ban after being found guilty of match-fixing, has spoken out about his country’s weak performances against Australia. Pakistan are 2-0 down heading into the third Test, which starts this Sunday (January 2), at Sydney.”Pakistan had the upper hand in both the matches as they started off well but due to lack of maturity they failed to press the Australians hard,” he told AFP on Thursday. “I am deeply disappointed by the manner we lost both the Tests in Australia and it was mainly due to lack of maturity in boys who are otherwise very talented. The batsmen have been too emotional. Besides the team, the management and the Pakistan Cricket Board lack maturity as they have appointed a foreign coach, Bob Woolmer, which is not our culture.”Malik, 41, also took a swipe at Shane Warne. “Warne has never been good against India, and if our batsmen played him with patience he wouldn’t get as many wickets as he gets against us,” he explained. “He is a negative bowler and tries to frustrate the batsman by bowling round the legs.”Malik, who made his highest Test score of 237 against Warne at Rawalpindi in 1994-95, rated him below Muttiah Muralitharan. “I think Sri Lanka’s Muralitharan is a better bowler because he comes good even when a pitch doesn’t suit spin bowling. Because I had trained with Pakistan’s great legspinner Abdul Qadir I had no problems against Warne. I used to play him with ease.”

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.

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