'Review will eradicate obvious errors' – Richardson

Richardson: ‘Should we have a system where the umpire is given an opportunity to review his own decision and make a final decision himself? That would be preferable.’ © AFP
 

Terming the new umpire referral system a ‘review process’ as opposed to a challenge process, Dave Richardson, the ICC’s general manager, was confident it would work well on a long-term basis with plenty of room for improvement. He said most umpires were in favour of this system and the real purpose is to eradicate obvious mistakes.”Our policy in the decision-making process has always been to keep an open mind,” he said. “You will recall in Sri Lanka in the 2002 Champions Trophy when we first started experimenting with technology and it continued until the Super Series in 2005, during which we allowed umpires to initiate a consultation on decisions. That didn’t work because the umpires didn’t refer decisions they should have. And then when they discovered that they could have made mistakes they became over cautious.”It was actually just wasting time. They were double-checking themselves and this lead to a loss of confidence of the players in the umpires. We realised it doesn’t work.”A lot of people will say reviews are contradictory to the spirit of the game and that players are challenging the umpires, but the way we look at it is – what is better or worse for the game? Umpires make mistakes and are accused of cheating, Steve Bucknor’s effigies are being burnt, teams threaten to fly home from a country, boards criticise umpires. Should we have a system where the umpire is given an opportunity to review his own decision and make a final decision himself? That would be preferable.”Richardson, who was present in the South African Test side when the first third-umpire referral was made in 1992-93, was firm that the ICC was not paying the television channels for the use of this technology, but rather saw it as a piggyback process. “The very first step in this process was to approach Ten Sports (the main broadcasters) and ask if they were willing to help us. They were keen to do so and we are very grateful to them. The broadcasters, like it or not, have been guilty in the past of showing up the umpires. All we ask them to do is continue to do so, but help us instead of being negative.”The ICC normally appoints three neutral Elite Panel umpires for a series. For this contest, instead of one umpire rotating and taking a break, he will act as the official third umpire. This, according to Richardson, was the way it would be going forward and there may even be the case of recalling some more experienced umpires to be specialist television umpires. But that, he affirmed, would be based on how the players felt about the situation.

Richardson on Steve Bucknor’s removal from the Perth Test in January

  • “There were calls for Steve to be fired permanently and we have resisted that. He’s a good umpire and he’s had a long career. The reason for taking him out was because of the hype which made it impossible for him to stand in that Test. He was on a hiding to nothing. The slightest error would have been blown out of proportion. To make it easier on him and his colleagues in that Test, we decided to rest him and so diffuse the situation.”

Over the last few days the ICC has worked with the company that provides the ball-tracking device. Cameras have been placed in correct positions around the SSC and both parties have confirmed the accuracy of the results. Camera use will differ from series to series but there are minimum specifications, clarified Richardson.The company being used to provide the ball tracking is not Hawk-Eye, as generally employed, but one called Virtual Eye. They are similar to Hawk-Eye, said Richardson, but the ICC would only use the actual path of the ball until it hits the batsman. “It will then stop, and we won’t use the predictive element because the suppliers of that technology will say that it’s a bit of a computer guess.”The trickiest part is going to be for the batsman,” said Richardson. “As far as caught-behinds and bat-pads are concerned I have no doubt that every batsman, if he is honest with himself, will know he’s got the finest edge. But I can understand as a batsman that you are uncertain as to whether the ball pitched on leg stump or slightly outside. It might be tricky and we may find a circumstance that you get back into the dressing room and your coach has spoken to you for not challenging the decision or asking for it to be reviewed. We must not forget what the real object of this system is – to eradicate obvious mistakes.”

Aiming for the roof

Practice pays off: Mahendra Singh Dhoni managed to find the roof of Karachi’s National Stadium against Hong Kong’s bowlers © AFP
 

Shortest-lived record … just
India and Sri Lanka were neck-to-neck in their run-scoring spree – against Hong Kong and Bangladesh respectively – today. However, Bangladesh bowled their overs at a slower pace than Hong Kong. By the time India finished their innings at 374 for 4 – the highest in an Asia Cup match – Sri Lanka, at 318 for 5, still had five overs left, and the record in grasp. But a few late-order wickets, and they could manage only 357 for 9, despite a 17-run final over. India’s record stayed intact – for all it’s worth.Champions of the left-arm spinners’ cause
With Mohammad Rafique having retired, and Shakib Al Hasan not playing in the Asia Cup, it’s Hong Kong who have been espousing the left-arm spinners’ cause in the tournament. For the second day in a row, they rode on their left-armers’ efforts. It was Nadeem Ahmed who gave Pakistan a shock on Tuesday, and today Najeeb Amar slowed India down with the wickets of Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir. The left-armers gave away 147 runs in 28 overs, as opposed to 220 scored in the remaining 22.Roof-top view
While he was practising at the National Stadium, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, batting on a practice pitch in the cover region, hit one onto the roof of the midwicket stands. He implemented that in his first match here, launching three sixes onto the roof – one so far back that Wasim Akram reckoned it was perhaps the biggest he’s seen at the ground. Practice does make perfect.Gony’s first … almost
Manpreet Gony, one of the bowlers unearthed during the Indian Premier League, got his international debut for this game, and came close to getting his first wicket in only his second over. He had got one to cut into Tabarak Dar and take his glove on the way through to Dhoni. But umpire Brian Jerling didn’t agree with Gony, and denied him his maiden wicket. As it turned out, Gony wouldn’t get a wicket in the next three overs; his maiden ODI wicket will have to wait for another day.

Bangalore seal seventh place with five-wicket win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Deccan Chargers frittered an excellent start provided by Adam Gilchrist and Herschelle Gibbs (file photo) © Getty Images
 

The home jinx for Deccan Chargers continued, as Bangalore Royal Challengers powered to a five-wicket win to register their fourth win of the IPL and assure themselves of seventh place. Set a modest target of 166, Bangalore started slowly, but cameos from Misbah-ul-Haq, Rahul Dravid, Cameron White and B Akhil ensured they got home with one over to spare.Deccan began strongly, but had only themselves to blame for frittering away an outstanding start: Herschelle Gibbs and Adam Gilchrist added 101 in just 11.2 overs, but from there it went rapidly downhill, as they lost nine for 56 in eight overs to slump to 165, after threatening 200 at one stage.Bangalore’s run-chase was hardly smooth, as wickets went down every time they seemed to be wresting the momentum. Kallis, Misbah and Dravid all contributed, but with five overs to go, they still needed 60. While Deccan had botched up with their batting towards the end, Bangalore turned it on, scoring an incredible 65 from the last four.Dravid got it going in the 16th over with three sublime fours – a couple of drives through the covers and a paddle-sweep. Though he got out next ball, Virat Kohli slapped his first ball over cover as 17 came from that Sanjay Bangar over. White, who had motored to a run-a-ball 16, then attacked P Vijaykumar, creaming a four and a six on the on-side to add 14 more runs from the over. Twenty-nine were now needed from 18, which came down to 16 from 12 as Akhil cleverly paddled two fours to fine leg off Vaas, who ended up going for 36 in his four overs.Akhil then decided to finish it off quickly off the hapless Chamara Silva – his second and third deliveries were lofted for straight sixes, and the last one disappeared over square leg as Akhil finished on an unbeaten 27 from seven deliveries, outstanding returns for a batsman who had scored just 14 in his previous five innings.Through the first 15 overs, though, it seemed Bangalore would struggle with the bat again. Kallis played some excellent orthodox strokes through the off side despite being hampered by a hamstring injury sustained while bowling, but awful running between the wickets caused two early mishaps. There was little communication between Kallis, Wasim Jaffer, and Kohli, Kallis’ runner. Jaffer’s return to the IPL was cut short by a direct hit from mid-off, and soon after he was short of the crease for the second time, this time as the runner for Kallis.Misbah was promoted to No. 3, and he seemed to be getting into groove, mixing deft glides and flicks with powerful pulls – Venugopal Rao was carted for 14 from three balls in the 11th over, but just as Bangalore seemed to be taking the initiative, Misbah cracked a long hop from Ravi Teja to long-off. Fortunately for Bangalore, they didn’t suffer too many setbacks thereafter.

There was no late surge for the Deccan Chargers, unlike in the case for the Bangalore Royal Challengers (Click here for bigger picture) © Cricinfo Ltd
 

If Bangalore built up momentum after an ordinary start, Deccan’s innings was shocking for the manner in which they failed to capitalise on the platform provided by the openers. After choosing to bat, Gilchrist and Gibbs started cautiously, scoring just 22 after four as Anil Kumble – who surprisingly bowled the first over – and Dale Steyn kept it on target. Once they were taken off the attack, the run-fest began. Gilchrist, who scored only six off his first 14 deliveries, changed gears by carving Kallis over mid-on and midwicket for fours, while Gibbs made his South African team-mate suffer in his next over, coming down the pitch and crashing him for a straight six.Deccan then feasted on Akhil, who had neither the pace nor the accuracy to test the batsmen. Two leg-side deliveries were tucked for fours by Gibbs, while Gilchrist was even more severe in his next over: the first two balls disappeared over long-on and midwicket for sixes, while the fourth and sixth went for fours to round off an over which leaked 20.The last stroke also brought up the century partnership – Deccan’s second hundred stand for the first wicket – and after 11 they were cruising at 101 without loss, but from there the innings lost its way completely. Gibbs was stumped, somewhat untidily, by Shreevats Goswami, Gilchrist fell in the next over, lofting to long-on, and the rest struggled.Rohit Sharma was hampered by a blow to his right hand from a Vinay Kumar delivery which rose unexpectedly, and though Rao spoilt Kumble’s figures by creaming two sixes and a four off his last three deliveries, Deccan lost all momentum towards the end, scoring just 16 off the last three overs.Halfway through the run-chase, it seemed Deccan might still get away with their sloppy batting, but that was before Akhil and White decided to turn it on.

Dolphins awarded match after thrilling tie

Baqai Dolphins entered into the semifinals of the 17th Karachi Gymkhana Callmate Festival after having tied their match against Sindh Police Friday.Having first use of the wicket after winning the toss, Baqai Dolphins had a sound start of 102 by Maisam Husnain (55) and Man of the Match Atiq-ur-Zaman (50) but collapsed to be bowled out for 175 in 19.4 overs in a match restricted to 20 overs.Sindh Police got oof to a splendid start when Kamran Hussain (56) and Akif Alvi (27) put on 85 for the first wicket. Kamran slashed eight fours and three sixes in his 27-ball knock and Akif clobbered four boundaries and a six off 15 deliveries.With three overs remaining Sindh Police needed 21 runs for victory with three wickets in hand. But two run outs left the Police trailing by 15 runs with the last man in and only an over left.Taking two runs off the first ball and heaving the next for a six and a single off the third, Iftikhar Ali brought his team closer to victory now needing six runs to win with three deliveries to spare. Off the last ball two runs were needed to win and as the two batsmen scampered home for the winning run, Ahmed Iqbal was run out and the match was tied with both teams dismissed for 175 runs.Baqai Dolphins were awarded the match on a faster run rate.Saturday’s fixture: (Quarterfinals) Dewan Mushtaq Sugar Mills v KESC at 1-30 p.m.KESC in semis Karachi Electric Supply Corporation (KESC), cruised into the semifinal of the Eighth Tapal Trophy Ramazan Festival tournament beating Defence Housing Authority (DHA) CC by seven wickets Friday.Winning the toss and batting first, DHA were bundled out for 89 in 20 overs with Moin Khan contributing 28 to his team’s score. Spinners Irfanuddin three for 11 and Asif Ghouri three for 17 did the damage.KESC lost both openers with 22 on the board. But Man of the Match Arif Mehmood 43 not out and Imran Javed (26), steered their team to a comfortable victory as KESC scored 95 for three in 18 overs.Aleem’s hostile spell A hostile spell of pace bowling by the Man of the Match Aleem Khan Moosa enabled Mohammad Hussain CC enter the final of the Seventh Danish Trophy Ramazan Tournament, after knocking out last year’s champions Rangers Gymkhana by 26 runs Friday.In a match restricted to 18 overs Mohammad Hussain CC winning the toss and batting first reached 123 for eight wickets, with Nisar Abbas (31) and Arslan Jawed (30) scoring the bulk of runs.Rangers Gymkhana were ahead on the run rate until Aleem Khan Moosa’s hostile spell in which he captured three wickets for 26 runs turned the tide.Saeed Tamoir top scored for the losing side with 29 runs and Saeed Ahmed chipped in with 20.Saturday’s fixture: KGA Gymkhana v Wakenhut CC 1-30 p.m.Eaglets in final Karachi Eaglets moved into the final of the Kareemuddin Colour Kit Ramazan Festival tournament getting the better of Rafiq Sherazi CC by 80 runs.Batting first, Karachi Eaglets raced to 215 for the loss of four wickets in the 20 overs through Mohammad Waheed (55), Khurram Abbas (47), Kashif Hanif (37 n.o.) and Asim Cheema (26).Sheerazi CC were dismissed for 135 in 15.1 overs. Shahid Dawood top scored with 41 and Asif Ghori made 26. Khurram Abbas later named the Man of the Match bagged three for 16.

Zimbabwe: Gaining Test Status

Zimbabwe, as Rhodesia, played in the inter-provincial Currie Cup competition in South Africa and for cricketing purposes were under the authority of that country’s administrators until independence in 1980. With the change in government continued association with South Africa was scarcely likely to be approved, but the Zimbabwe Cricket Union took the decision themselves to sever links with South Africa and go it alone in world cricket as a separate entity.First came entry into the ICC competitions for associate members, with the winner each time earning a place in the World Cup competition. Zimbabwe won all three ICC competitions in which they took part, in 1982, 1986 and 1990, and never lost a match. In the World Cup they beat Australia in their very first match, in 1983, and England in 1991/92, and came very close to upsetting India in 1983 and New Zealand in 1987/88. All this time they were aiming for full Test status, and these performances showed they had a good case.Zimbabwe played in the World Cup competition of 1991/92 in Australia and New Zealand, losing seven of their eight matches but turning in some impressive performances at times. Apart from their victory over England in their final match, their best match was their first, against Sri Lanka at New Plymouth in New Zealand, where they ran up 312 for four – Andy Flower batting right through for 115 on his one-day international debut – only for the opposition to win the match with 313 for seven.In July 1992 the annual ICC meeting took place at Lord’s, and Zimbabwe’s application for Test status would again be on the agenda. It was crucial, as it was an open secret in Zimbabwe that if their application was again rejected, many of the country’s top players would either retire or seek their fortunes in other countries, especially South Africa, recently returned to the international fold. Had this happened, cricket in Zimbabwe would probably never have recovered.Some of the players involved commented as follows:Dave Houghton: “I was going to continue playing. I was still playing club cricket overseas at the time as well and enjoying it, so I didn’t have any plans to retire; I was still trying to make a living playing in England and just hoping we’d get back into the Currie Cup.”Andy Flower: “I remember that Grant and I were discussing leaving Zimbabwe and going to play domestic cricket in South Africa. We hadn’t planned anything, but I suspect that if we hadn’t got Test status we might well have moved on.”Grant Flower: “I thought maybe of going to South Africa or of going to play league cricket overseas.”Eddo Brandes: “I think I would still have been involved here, playing cricket as I did before Test status. A cricketer always wants to play county cricket, so you don’t know how your career would have progressed without Test cricket, and I may have had an opportunity to do that.”Alistair Campbell: “I think the Graeme Hick route to county cricket might have been the case for a lot of us – not only me but also the two Flowers. We were still very amateur in those days and all the other players had jobs – your Arnotts, Pycrofts, Burmesters, Crockers, Brandes – and they would have continued playing here, but the youngsters, particularly myself and the two Flowers, might have tried to find an occupation elsewhere, much like the youth just before us, the Trevor Penneys, Graeme Hicks and suchlike.”I think England was where everybody was going, and a lot of the guys I’ve spoken to over the years, the Bruk-Jacksons and suchlike, went and played second-team county cricket; those guys didn’t carry it on, but I think it would have been the case with us – or maybe join the MCC staff. There were a few options open at that stage, and then progress from there, try and qualify and maybe play for England, but definitely county cricket.”Kevin Arnott: “I think I would have carried on playing first-class cricket as and when it was available. I realize that I had enormous limitations as a player but the prospect of Test status was certainly encouraging for those hoping to make a professional career out of it.”Malcolm Jarvis: “I would just have carried on playing as we’d always done. There was no real thought of quitting cricket.”Many, including some of the players, felt that Zimbabwe did not have the resources to succeed at Test level and a better path would have been to link up with South Africa again and rejoin the Currie Cup competition, even though that was unlikely to mean any Test cricket played in Zimbabwe.Andy Pycroft: “Ironically I was one of many who were egging on for Test status, which is obviously the ultimate cricketing ambition for anyone, but didn’t believe we could get it. So the mind was set that we probably wouldn’t get it, it wouldn’t happen in my time, and the regrets I have is that, having got it in 1992, I look back and say in 1982, which was when we really came on to the scene internationally after independence, we had a great side coming through, and why didn’t we get it then? We had to go through three ICC tournaments and some really good results against international sides in three-day cricket on tours to Zimbabwe. But we lost cricketers during that time, and what a shame that that brilliant side, with all those youngsters coming through didn’t have that chance. People like myself, at least I played Test cricket, and was able to play three Tests in the end before I retired, but it would have been great if we had been able to get it earlier.”Dave Houghton: “I must admit at the time I thought we had a choice between Test status and going back into the Currie Cup in South Africa. I know the players felt quite strongly at the time that we should go back into the Currie Cup because we weren’t a very strong side and we were quite worried that we’d embarrass ourselves in Test cricket. My plans were very simply that if we didn’t get Test status the second option would come about.”Andy Flower: “My own opinion was that we shouldn’t get Test status, that we should try to rejoin the Currie Cup system and build our cricket from there. Those were my beliefs at the time. I was very surprised when we got Test status; I think we have been incredibly lucky to have played international cricket for ten years. We came into the game in this country at just the right time for us.”Eddo Brandes: “Obviously as a player I always wanted it to happen so we could play on the big stage. I think it probably came a few years too late; probably the best time to have got it would have been after the 1987 World Cup.”Alistair Campbell: “I thought we should have got Test status. We were at a stage where cricket needed to progress in this country. We definitely had enough players to succeed on the international stage, and we had shown that at the previous World Cups we had been to. We weren’t push-overs and that was with very little experience or preparation, and 15 guys in the squad who all worked. So considering that and our dominance of the ICC Trophy for ten years, I think the time was right. We had some very good youngsters coming through, some very good experienced older players who were rated in world terms, the likes of Pycroft and Houghton, and obviously Eddo Brandes and John Traicos in the bowling stakes. I think that was prime time for us to be introduced slowly into the world arena because we had outgrown the ICC Trophy and were a lot better than those other sides and had a much better infrastructure.”Kevin Arnott: “I think it was important for the development of the game. I think if you look back in the last ten years, Zimbabwe in the Test arena has been competitive, more than most believed we would be, given our small pool of players. Cricket in Zimbabwe has become an enormous business.”Malcolm Jarvis: “It would have been nice to have had it earlier than we did because we lost a lot of good players by not getting Test status earlier.”John Traicos: “Whilst I favoured Zimbabwe getting Test status and believed we could compete at that level, I was apprehensive about Zimbabwe being able to maintain its standards in the long term and felt that we should wait a little longer. My fears were proved wrong as Zimbabwe has done extraordinarily well in its first ten years, thanks to the commitment of its players, sound administration and good coaching.”In 1990 Dave Ellman-Brown took over as president of the Zimbabwe Cricket Union in succession to Alwyn Pichanick, who had been president for many years but had to stand down on his government appointment as president of the Sports Commission. Dave, as vice-president, was his natural successor and the two had worked together to press Zimbabwe’s claims for Test status.Dave said, “We were very amateurish in those days because we had no secretariat, but only a very small committee that ran cricket. Alwyn ran it out of his office with his secretary and I ran my affairs out of my office with my secretary. I had a period of two years as president, and it was my wish then that we really press for Test status, bearing in mind that we had been pressing for Test status ever since we became an associate member of the ICC in 1981, after leaving the South African cricketing umbrella.”We just made the qualification to go to the ICC competition for associate members in 1982. We had never been to Europe as a team and didn’t really know what the strengths were, but history will show that we went to three ICC competitions and never lost a game; we won every single one of them (excluding two abandoned matches) and I think stamped our authority as the leading associate country.”During that time Alwyn Pichanick and I had had several meetings with various countries to try and persuade them to allow us to become a Test-playing country. We received very little support, and in those days the constitution of the ICC was such that we had to have the vote of the two founder members (England and Australia) and that was the main difficulty. They then changed the rules whereby you had to get the support of one founder member and we thought this was our opportunity again to push for Test status. We realized that England were very much against any expansion of the Test-playing countries, bearing in mind that Sri Lanka had been admitted in 1981, so we believed that the people to push for support were Australia.”Australia were very difficult: Malcolm Grey, their president at the time, was not supportive of us and we found it extremely difficult. England were sympathetic but at the end of the day, when it came to voting, wouldn’t accept us. It really came down to the 1991/92 World Cup, by which time I was president and it was my ambition that we should seriously look for Test status at that time.”Thus began Dave Ellman-Brown’s tremendous diplomatic offensive to persuade the other Test-playing nations to admit Zimbabwe to the top level. “I did a lot of lobbying among all the Test-playing countries, apart from England, whom I did not attempt to try to persuade because I knew with their structure they would certainly not support us. We’ve always had very good support from India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and West Indies.”During our days as an associate country we had West Indies A here three times and they were very supportive of our cricket, and always said they would support us for Test status. We also got very good support from India, and Pakistan and Sri Lanka came along with us, so there was never any problem with them.”We now had to get the support of Australia. New Zealand then, out of the blue, advised us that they were sympathetic to our cause and we shouldn’t even bother to go and talk to them as they had made up their minds and had already voted to support us. So the only country we still had to convince was Australia.”Prior to the 1991/92 World Cup I went to Australia with my vice-president, Peter Chingoka, and we spent a good week or more before the start of the World Cup just trying to suss out the situation and make sure they were supportive of us. It was quite a hard task. The Aussies, as you know, are not easy to get round, but we got a lot of support from the authorities, the president and various board members, who did express to us their concerns about where we should go. Numbers came into it, and they were concerned that as a newly independent country numbers might change and whether we would have sufficient people in the future to play Test cricket. We said we believed we had, and we put forward a very good case.”We had the opportunity of talking to their board because the chief executive of Australia at that time was David Richards who ultimately became the ICC chief executive. He said to me, ‘David, there’s only one way you can get our support, and that is to come and talk to our board and convince them that you believe we should support you for Test status.'”So we did that; he advised us and gave us a slot at their board meeting, and Peter Chingoka and I gave them a presentation, a written presentation together with a verbal presentation, and we tried to cover every aspect we could. We got very few questions in response, and we weren’t too sure when we left the meeting that we had convinced them. It was only that night, when we were flying to New Zealand for the first game in Auckland at the opening of the World Cup that David Richards jokingly said to me, ‘You messed that up, didn’t you?’ But in fact he complimented us on our presentation and said that they would seriously look at us.”During that World Cup I also spoke to Malcolm Grey, the president, and he said to me, ‘David, well done; you’ve made a very good presentation and we’re very impressed. Now we want to see whether you can play cricket or not.’ And of course in that World Cup we beat England at Albury and I think that helped us tremendously to swing the people in our direction.”It was a couple of months later that David Richards phoned me one Sunday, and I knew it wasn’t to say bad luck. He said, ‘We’ve just had a meeting of our overseas committee who were tasked to make a decision as to whether we should support you, and they are unanimously behind you and will support you.'”So when we went to the ICC Annual meeting in July 1992 it was a foregone conclusion that we would actually get Test status. I remember before we left the media was speculating as to whether we were looking for Test status and I merely indicated that we were. The press were speculating about our chances but I knew we had it in the bag.”At the meeting at Lord’s Sir Colin Cowdrey, as he then was, the chairman of the ICC, asked us to step outside the room, and Peter Chingoka and I stood for what seemed like ages in the Long Room while the delegates discussed our case inside. Then Cowdrey came out with a smile and invited us to enter, and as we went in we received a warm welcome of applause from all inside.”It so turned out that England and, funnily enough, Fiji abstained from voting. I don’t know why Fiji did because they were only an associate country and one of the weakest; Philip Snow, their leader, was I think looking for a knighthood for his services to Fijian cricket and perhaps kept very close to England and didn’t want to rock the boat, but it made no sense at all for him not to support us, because we were far too strong for the associates.”I have to say that when we were looking for Test status, and after we had received it, there were a lot of people in Zimbabwe who criticized us and the route we had taken. They believed it was the right thing to link up again with South Africa, which was politically impossible. It was vitally important we went that route for the good of the game and I believe we have been proven correct.”When you look back at the game in Zimbabwe over the last ten years, you can see there was an enormous explosion of cricket. Of late you have seen a whole restructuring of the administration of the game, a broadening of the game in all directions, and the development programme is enormous, so I think our decision to go the Test route was exactly correct. This country would never been able to do what it has done and what it is doing today without Test status.”I think we got it too late – I think that had we got it even four years earlier we would have saved some of the players we lost. It was a great shame Graeme Hick never played Test cricket for us. Duncan Fletcher was another who left us; so did Peter Rawson, Kevin Curran and Trevor Penney. Those people could so easily have been playing for a long time for Zimbabwe had we got it earlier.”I think ICC had a very narrow mind at that time about who they would let in as a Test-playing country. Since then they have let in Bangladesh, and when you see what they made us go through, compared to what Bangladesh had done prior to being awarded Test status it is ridiculous.”I am very proud of the fact that we were able to organize so many A team tours to this country, and we saw the best of our modern Test players during that period when they were playing for their countries’ A sides. The West Indies side was an unbelievable side; the Australian side that came here was a wonderful team. We got support from all those countries who sent their A sides here and helped develop cricket in Zimbabwe. So we had a wonderful record, and a wonderful one-day record in particular. We had some good players and the era under Duncan Fletcher was a very good era.”What would be the state of Zimbabwe cricket today had our application for Test cricket failed? “That decision to get Test status was absolutely critical for the future of Zimbabwe cricket. I’m glad we took it; we took the criticism, and a lot of those who criticized at the time have changed their minds. If we had not been given Test status then, cricket in this country would have failed completely. I think the game would be non-existent today.”One very important decision was taken at that time. When South Africa was allowed back as a Test-playing country, one year before we got Test status. I said to Lord Cowdrey at that time that if, having allowed South Africa to come in at the eleventh hour, they did not give us the lifeline of also having Test status, cricket in this country would have died a natural death. All our top players would have tried to get into South Africa to play cricket there, and the game would be totally non-existent today beyond club cricket.”But as it was, we got it. The development came in, the money came in, we had some very lucrative tours, and we’ve spent an awful lot of money on developing the infrastructure and on developing our young Zimbabwe cricketers.”It was primarily thanks to Dave Ellman-Brown’s vision and energy that Zimbabwe achieved Test status and survived as a viable cricketing entity; he proved to be the right man in the right place at the right time – as indeed did Andy Flower as a player.”I think I was very lucky in that I only started playing proper international cricket at the age of 24,” Andy said. “I had done a lot of the groundwork already in playing first-class and club cricket, and some of the youngsters these days are thrown right in at the deep end without that groundwork in first-class cricket or plying their trade in England or other places.”Dave Houghton: “I was a little bit surprised (we were granted Test status) because it seemed to me that if they were going to give us Test status they should have done it in about 1986 when we were a really strong side and had won our second ICC Trophy. I was surprised they gave it to us at that time because we were a weak team. Our strength had been depleted with the loss of Graeme Hick, Peter Rawson and Kev Curran and so on. I was also a little worried because I just didn’t think we were strong enough, so there was a fear of embarrassment as well, that we might go out there and get beaten in two days.”Alistair Campbell: “I was positive; I thought things would happen. I remember listening to it on the BBC with my old man in the bedroom where he had his receiver, but prior to that I was confident. There had been a lot of hard work done and a lot of positive vibes emanating from the powers that be regarding that meeting. There were obviously a few issues there, such as the English, but I think the other countries realized that for the greater good of the game, and they were proven right.”Things moved swiftly after that vital ICC meeting, although Dave Ellman-Brown did not find it easy to arrange tours immediately. “When we got Test status, the decision was taken on the last day of the conference, so we didn’t have much time to lobby for tours. I remember distinctly when the meeting was finished they hurried together a press conference and made the announcement, and after that we just had a function that night and then everybody goes home. So it was a case of running around to the presidents and chief executives of the various countries and saying, ‘We’re now a Test-playing country, so how about organizing some tours?'”India, one of Zimbabwe’s leading supporters, were eager for the honour of playing in the inaugural Test, and this was arranged for three months after that crucial ICC meeting, in October 1992. New Zealand also agreed to stop over on their way to Sri Lanka.”It was a case of making contact with all the countries, but it’s not easy to break into an existing system,” said Dave Ellman-Brown. “All those countries had their own tours arranged, so it was very difficult to get tours initially, and it was over the years difficult to tie people down to come. We did on occasions try to marry tours together with teams coming to South Africa, and that worked, but the greatest thing that happened was the ten-year programme that we have now. For that we can thank Chris Doig, the then chief executive of New Zealand cricket, who put it together about two years before it was all approved. That was wonderful, because we know we’re going to get two tours at home and two abroad every year, as a standard procedure.”But in those early days it was not easy, and we have to thank India for their support. But today I think everybody is supportive and it’s a wonderful club of cricketing countries. There is politics creeping into it and there are problems at the moment, and I hope those problems go away, but by and large it’s a grouping of countries and people who want to see the game develop. So cricket is assured now in Zimbabwe as long as there is no interference on the political front.”Despite his original feelings, Andy Flower felt thrilled at the prospect of playing Test cricket for Zimbabwe. “To play against the best in the world is exactly what you want to be doing,” he said. “We had been handed this opportunity to do it. It was very hard sometimes because we were getting beaten most of the time, and that makes it tough to carry on persevering – but it is an honour to carry on playing against the best in the world.”Eddo Brandes: “Our preparation was probably much the same as for all cricket tours, but there was a lot more excitement, because we were going into this new level of cricket which was Test cricket.”Alistair Campbell: “It was huge. There was a change of attitude, one of those things where you need a change of mind-set. You need to practise more, be more professional about our approach. I can remember we got paid Z$800 for our first Test match, but it wasn’t about money at that stage; it was about having the opportunity to play international cricket, making sure that we proved to the people who voted for us that we could compete among the elite.”There was no talk in those days of winning; there was talk of competing, which was the big word. To be competitive we had to be gutsy, and with Houghton and Pycroft being very experienced campaigners we talked about the need to bat for long periods of time, longer than we had ever batted before. Some of the guys had played a few four-day games, but the most the rest of the guys had played was a bit of three-day cricket, and this was suddenly five-day cricket. We talked about the need for bowlers to bowl more overs than they were used to bowling, and it needed a whole shift of mindset. Dave Houghton did that well, as did John Hampshire, who was employed as our first fulltime coach. He was really good for us just starting off in international cricket. He spoke very simply; he was a Yorkshireman so he was as tough as nails, and he really was a tremendous help to us in those formative years of Test cricket and did a tremendous job.”It was also a matter of just feeling our way through those first few years. No one knew exactly what to expect; people had been told and had obviously spoken to people, and John Hampshire had played Test cricket; on Zimbabwe’s previous tours home and abroad we had spoken to ex-Test players, so there had been the opportunity to speak about Test cricket. But it’s all very well speaking about it, it’s playing it for five days, and the mindset and mental toughness that you need. We’ve had to teach ourselves over the years, and once you have a Test culture, like countries that have been playing it for a hundred years, and we’re still getting that. But I think from those days in 1992 to what we have now, the infrastructure and the results we’ve been able to post with the resources we have has been a real testimony to those who have played and the administrators upstairs as well.”Grant Flower: “I just remember John Hampshire, our coach, trying to drum into us, especially the openers, the importance of batting long periods and breaking it down into sessions, which we had never done before or been told about.”Zimbabwe were to do better, on the whole, in their early Tests than they often did in later years; it was not until they first played in Sri Lanka in 1996/97, for their 17th Test match, that they were really overwhelmed. Andy Flower said, “I think part of the reason is that we had experienced players in those days, as opposed to youngsters thrown in at the deep end; we had guys like John Traicos, Dave Houghton, Malcolm Jarvis and Kevin Arnott to hold things together – experienced first-class cricketers. I know they didn’t play for long, but while we had them they were a steadying influence. Certainly that was my memory of them as a young cricketer.”Also I think some of the standards of international cricket have improved over the last ten years, and it’s a harder school now. One-day cricket is a more aggressive game by a long way, and standards all round have improved in one-day cricket. Test cricket I think has become more aggressive too, so we’re not only trying to hold our own, we’re also trying to improve to keep up with these other teams, let alone catch up.”I remember it being a very nervous build-up to the Inaugural Test,” he continued. “John Hampshire was our coach and he was a big influence on all of us. He emphasized the basics all the time, whether those basics were catching everything that came straight to us, taking a certain percentage of the half-chances, batting for time, making sure your footwork was simple but correct: when you had to get forward, get forward into a solid position, and when you had to get back and across do it; leave the ball, and bat for little sessions – I’m sure you’ll hear most of the batsmen say similar things. He just kept drumming this into people. Those are some of the basics that should be revisited all the time by international cricketers.”John Hampshire, former Yorkshire and England cricketer and later international umpire, certainly deserves much of the credit for Zimbabwe’s remarkable performances in their early Tests. Kevin Arnott remembers how he identified with the spirit almost of desperation among the Zimbabwe players on the eve of that inaugural Test, and could tell of the time when he himself made his Test debut against West Indies in 1969, and responded with a vital century after coming in with England in some difficulty. So inspired were the Zimbabwe players that they went in the next day and responded with 456.Dave Houghton: “We employed ‘Hamps’ as coach, and I think that was probably the best thing that happened to us because I’m sure he realized the enormity of the situation. The first thing he did was to get us to go right back to basics and literally count every ball that was bowled for the next five days – play it ball by ball, over by over, 15 overs to drinks, 15 overs to lunch, and so on, trying to occupy the crease for as long as possible.”Our preparation was basically that we wanted this game to go five days. The best result would obviously be a victory, but the next best result would be a draw and the next best result would be losing in five days. We wanted to prove that we could actually play five days and that was what our preparation was about: how do we go about playing for five days?”Eddo Brandes: “He (Hampshire) was probably an ideal coach for us initially. He was a Test match umpire, a Test cricketer, and he knew what it was all about. So we weren’t completely in the dark as to what Test cricket was about. He was a stabilizing influence, and his character also was stabilizing. He wasn’t very excitable; he just got on like an English professional would do and got us to prepare for the game with that in mind.”Kevin Arnott: “I remember very clearly that it was largely John Hampshire who inculcated into us a philosophy of simple things done well. Most of us were reasonably fit coming into the Test series, but John made it very clear that he wouldn’t take any laggers, and I can assure you that by the time the Inaugural Test took place everybody was in peak fitness. So the physical side was there; the actual playing preparation was also under the guidance of John and he made sure that we developed the ability, talking personally as an opening batsman, to leave most of the balls we felt we couldn’t score off and to play in sessions.”He then made it very clear to us that all that would be academic unless the mental preparation was there, and I think it’s largely in this area that his guidance was most helpful. I think it showed in the Inaugural Test because the record shows that for a large part of that match we were on top of the game. Although we were very slow on the first day, thereafter we were very much in the driving seat. It was really only Manjrekar who saved the game for them.”Malcolm Jarvis: “It was the first time we had really had a coach for the team. Normally it was left to chaps like Duncan Fletcher and the players to do all the coaching; now we had a fulltime professional coach in. One line that ‘Hamps’ always used with us was “Simple things done well.” As long as we did the simple things and did them well, the other things would fall into place.”John Traicos, the only player with previous Test experience, said, “Having played Test cricket obviously helped in appreciating the pressures of international cricket and realizing that it is just another game of cricket played at a tougher standard. Good mental and physical preparation was the key and in this regard John Hampshire, the coach, andDavid Houghton, the captain, were outstanding. John Hampshire recounted his first Test at the pre-Test team talk – it gave everyone an idea of the pressures of Test cricket and how they could be handled.”How did the Zimbabwe players feel they would do as they prepared to face India on the biggest stage of all for the first time? “Our feelings were always positive; you always believe you can win,” claimed Eddo Brandes. “But then after playing a game, you find out there is a big void between playing first-class cricket and Test cricket. But the build-up was that we genuinely believed we would be able to perform.”

Pakistan set for victory in Harare Test

Pakistan, barring an unexpected intervention from the weather, are practicallycertain to win the first Test match against Zimbabwe at the Harare Sports Club,thanks to contrasting centuries by Inzamam-ul-Haq and Taufeeq Umer againstinept Zimbabwean bowling. Zimbabwe, needing 420 to win, finished with 19for one.Zimbabwe began the day with hopes that history might repeat itself and asimilar victory from behind as that at Peshawar in 1998/99 might bepossible. Henry Olonga, a hero on that occasion, soon bowled a lifting ballthat struck Younis Khan (8) painfully on the fingers and flew to AlistairCampbell in the slips, reducing Pakistan to 25 for two. Then Inzamam gotoff the mark with a snick that flew just over the head of Andy Flower atfirst slip and went to the boundary. Had it been just a little lower, thestory of the day’s play might have been very different.But that was Zimbabwe’s last sniff, and they had only themselves to blame asthey surrendered the match in the pre-lunch session. Olonga never put ittogether consistently, and at one stage bounced a ball so high over the headsof batsman Inzamam and wicket-keeper Tatenda Taibu that it went for a totalof five wides. His partners at the other end were no more efficient, andshort medium-fast deliveries outside off stump are meat and drink toInzamam. He enjoyed a feast of boundaries and his fifty came up off 53balls, containing no fewer than 12 fours. When he reached 32 he became onlythe second Pakistani, after the legendary Javed Miandad, to reach 6,000 runsin Test cricket. The television suggested, though, that he was perhapslucky to survive an lbw appeal when on 40 to Raymond Price as soon as hecame on to bowl, umpire Dave Orchard disagreeing.Zimbabwe’s economic disasters have not destroyed the generous nature of herpeople, and Pakistan were so grateful for the vast number of four-balls onoffer that the hundred came up in the 19th over. Zimbabwe’s fielding becamerather ragged, and in the last over before lunch Inzamam joined the selectband who have scored a century before lunch in a Test match, although it wasan extended session due to time lost on the second day. It took him 102balls and 138 minutes. All credit to Pakistan; they were given theirchances and took them superbly.After lunch the contest briefly became keen again. Inzamam hammered Olongafor two more fours and then smashed a ball straight to Grant Flower atbackward point. He departed reluctantly, perhaps sensing anothertriple-century wasted. Yousuf Youhana uncharacteristically hung his bat outto be caught at the wicket off Andy Blignaut without scoring, and suddenly,briefly, Zimbabwe threatened again. Taufeeq became becalmed, while HasanRaza took a long time to get going. But slowly they put Pakistan back ontop, and after Raza departed to a catch at mid-off the debutant KamranAkmal, after a slow start, hit some impressive blows.Taufeeq crawled towards his century, moving from 70 at lunch to 97 at tea,27 off 83 balls. A misfield by Price allowed him to reach three figures off197 deliveries, in five hours. He finally fell for 115, caught down the legside off Blignaut and walking without waiting for the apparently indecisiveumpire Orchard. Kamran had already been bowled by Price and now Blignautbowled Waqar Younis.Pakistan were 318 for eight, to add to their lead of 60 on first innings.Then came a period of village green cricket, as tail-enders Saqlain Mushtaqand Shoaib Akhtar tried to indulge in some spectacular baseball oragricultural strokes against the second new ball, taken by Blignaut andOlonga, neither of whom seemed able to put the ball on the wicket or producethe leg-stump yorker that would almost certainly have ended the slog.Zimbabwe seemed to have lost all purpose, and the last two wickets wereallowed to add 51. Olonga finished with five wickets, but one cannot say hewas impressive.Zimbabwe, batting just before the close until bad light again curtailedplay, soon lost Hamilton Masakadza (0), superbly caught by short leg SaleemElahi off Shoaib Akhtar. Dion Ebrahim and Alistair Campbell at leastsurvived with sensible positive play until the close.

Shahbaz and Abhishek spin Sunrisers Hyderabad into IPL final

“There’s nothing more satisfying than hearing a big crowd go silent.” Pat Cummins, November 18, 2023. The next day he took Virat Kohli’s wicket and made a ground with 100,000 people feel like a ghost town.”We have earned the right to have one of those days and still win tournaments.” Pat Cummins, May 21, 2024. It’s taken a little while longer for him to walk the talk but boy when he says something we best listen. Sunrisers Hyderabad marched into the final of IPL 2024 and this time they did it with their bowling.It looked like Rajasthan Royals had won a crucial toss and they did the right thing by opting to chase. One square boundary was significantly shorter than the other (61m vs 72m) and asymmetry like that makes it really hard to defend totals, especially if the dew came in, but it didn’t. All of a sudden SRH had a dry ball and a dry pitch. And they worked a miracle on that.

SRH stun RR with spin

Shahbaz Ahmed originally came into this game to try and shore up a stop-start batting innings. It was the second time in two playoff games that SRH had to pull the Impact Player trigger early. He made 17 in a partnership of 43 with Heinrich Klaasen to push the total up to 175. But that total looked light when Yashasvi Jaiswal raced to 41 off 19 balls. The game was slipping away. Except it had also shown SRH a way to claw back. Jaydev Unadkat’s first over – the seventh – showed signs of how much the ball was gripping. SRH had no specialist spinner in their line-up but in conditions like these you don’t need specialists. You just need people that can turn the ball and hold a line. Shahbaz did that and more, winning a match-up he was second-favourite in. Bowling into the left-hander’s hitting arc, he handed Jaiswal his first dismissal to spin since IPL 2022.

Hetmyer fined for Code of Conduct breach

Shimron Hetmyer has been fined 10% of his match fees for breaching the IPL Code of Conduct during the Qualifier 2. He committed a Level 1 offence under Article 2.2 of the IPL Code of Conduct. He admitted to the offence and accepted the match referee’s sanction.

Cummins brought Abhishek Sharma, who had bowled only three overs this campaign, from the other end. He even called Aiden Markram to roll his arm over. The pitch was now taking handsome amounts of turn and Cummins used any means in his armoury to exploit it. SRH produced a 33-ball period without a single boundary using bowlers whom they haven’t really had to turn to but were there now at this crucial time. This 33-ball period also included four wickets. Shahbaz who hadn’t picked up a wicket since April 5 turned up with 4-0-23-3 tonight. Abhishek, who had bowled his full quota of overs only twice before Friday, finished with 4-0-24-2.

Klaasen gamechanger

SRH have one of the world’s best batters as a finisher and that played a big part in their win. Heinrich Klaasen does not need any protection. He does not need his entry point to be delayed because he has the ability to move through the gears. He can resurrect a failing innings with risk-free shots and still find ways to hit boundaries when he needs to. He was 21 off 20 balls in the 13th over. SRH were 108 for 4 at that point. Batting in Chennai is tricky because of the slowness of the pitches here. Mis-hits can still go for four in the powerplay when there are only two fielders outside the circle but that luck runs out once the field restrictions are lifted. Klaasen understood this nuance and waited for his moments; his match-ups. He has an excellent one against Yuzvendra Chahal and that’s whom he targeted, hitting two mighty sixes, including one to the long boundary. The back-foot drive over extra cover was breathtaking.Heinrich Klaasen brought out his vertical-bat pull against spin•BCCI

Royal pains

Looking back now, all the good work RR did feels bittersweet. Trent Boult gave them a first-over wicket for the seventh time this season breaking a partnership that has rewritten history. Abhishek and Travis Head have been scoring their runs at 13.64 an over, the best in IPL history (min 300 runs scored).Sandeep Sharma bowled 18 slower balls in his spell for just 17 runs and picked up the wicket of Head. His yorker, where he changed his action to be extra slingy, slipped underneath Klaasen in prime hitting form and knocked out his stumps. RR gave away only 12 runs in the last two overs with Avesh Khan executing his yorkers near perfectly. He dismissed Nitish Kumar Reddy, who actually had a decent plan against those yorkers – the reverse scoop because there was no one on the deep-third boundary – by refusing to give him a ball to get underneath. It was high quality planning and execution.

Royals’ batting gets stuck again

RR’s strength in their bowling comes at a price. The batting depth. And they felt it all the more acutely because Jos Buttler has left to link up with the England squad to prepare for the T20 World Cup and Shimron Hetmyer has been carrying an injury. They tried covering up for it by sending R Ashwin at No. 6 but it didn’t work.Tom Kohler-Cadmore, who was brought in to open the batting in place of Buttler, looked out of his depth, scoring 6 off 13 before being dismissed for 10 off 16. Sanju Samson made a mistake under pressure, looking to access the long boundary and getting caught for 10 off 11. Riyan Parag was facing 3.3 degrees of turn on average and he too made the wrong call, looking to hit across the line and getting caught off the top edge for 6 off 10. Dhruv Jurel fought hard for a while, scoring 56 off 35 balls, but the balance of power never really looked like it was shifting.SRH have produced some scintillating performances in this IPL but this – winning with their weaker suit – was special. They’re going to be a serious threat to Kolkata Knight Riders on Sunday.

Sam Cook takes nine for the day as Northants face four-session ignominy against Essex

Sam Cook starred with an extraordinary nine-wicket haul on a ramshackle day of batting, as Essex and Northamptonshire did their level best to fast-forward the end of their county seasons by two full days, and thereby trigger an early start to Essex’s celebrations after they all but secured one of the more spurious red-ball trophies of their storied recent run.The Second Division trophy may lack the cachet it held back in 2016, when Essex kickstarted their reign as the country’s pre-eminent first-class team by marching back to the top flight after a six-year absence – this time, they will be picking up a gong for finishing precisely seventh out of 18, which is about as specifically weird as this grand old game gets.But at least they are likely to seize their spoils in style, as Northamptonshire limped to the close of their second innings on 23 for 5, still trailing by 66 runs and with their hopes of making it even as far as lunch on day two looking as flat and forlorn as James Sales’ off stump, as Cook signed off a remarkable personal haul of 9 for 26 in 17.5 overs by bowling the hero of Northants’ recent rearguard against Durham with the final ball of the day.Even allowing for the brilliance of a young bowler who has now surged past 50 wickets for the season, there really were no mitigating circumstances in a desperate team display. Five of Cook’s dismissals were pinned-on-the-front-pad lbws, as Northants – seemingly suffering from end-of-era-itis as David Ripley’s fabled reign dribbles to an unworthy conclusion – found themselves consistently confounded by a modicum of movement on an unwavering full length.Adam Rossington even won the toss for the visitors and chose to bat first, perhaps having considered that Simon Harmer in late-September is a threat best countered in the first innings than the fourth. As it was, Harmer barely had a chance to feature. Northants were three-down for 29 before he entered the attack for a five-over foray in the first innings, and though he served up a handful of sizzlers in a three-over burst before stumps, this is shaping up as possibly the quietest contest of his Essex career.Harmer may also be involved in some fairly quiet Essex celebrations, as and when the contest is sealed, given that Ronnie Irani’s current boardroom agitations seem to centre around allegations of a drinking culture at Chelmsford. Nevertheless, as the County Ground lined up at the lunch break for an emotional salute to the retiring Ryan ten Doeschate, after 19 years of trophy-harvesting service, it was a salutary reminder that the game’s glories are judged in human terms as well as by the weight of a team’s silverware.Adam Rossington survives an appeal for lbw, a rare achievement in Northants’ innings•Andrew Miller

Tendo declined the chance to be directly involved in this fixture, and with Tom Westley also absent due to his fast-impending parenthood, the captaincy passed to one of Essex’s younger senior pros. And for 47.4 overs, spanning two separate innings, Dan Lawrence would have been forgiven for thinking he’s got this leadership thing nailed. Jamie Porter set the full-lengthed tone with a brace of wickets in his first four overs – each of them a left-hander in Ricardo Vasconcelos and Luke Procter, whose off stump went tumbling as he flung his hands dismissively through an ill-aligned drive.And thereafter, Northants’ innings degenerated like a clueless younger brother in a game of Brian Lara Cricket. Rob Keogh: full, straight, pinned on the pad! Saif Zaib: full, straight, pinned on the pad! Emilio Gay: full, straight, pinned on the pad! Josh Cobb, full, straight, pinned on the pad!Guileless from top to bottom, right down to the skipper Rossington himself, who signalled some resistance when he dropped to one knee to slog-sweep Cook over midwicket for six, only to ruin his own endeavours by attempting the same trick too balls later, to be … you guessed it, pinned on the pad by a straight one!Simon Kerrigan was then pinned on the front pad by a full and straight one (fancy that) to give Cook his fifth wicket in the space of 39 balls, having actually gone wicketless for the first 32 balls of his day, whereupon Porter broke with the theme of the innings as Sales was caught at first slip by Alastair Cook for a duck, Northants’ last three wickets falling without addition.Related

  • Rikki Clarke begins the long goodbye as David Lloyd makes Surrey toil

  • Sam Hain leads the way as Warwickshire realise that Championship is in sight

  • Nottinghamshire's title hopes on knife's edge after Joe Clarke's elegant hundred

  • Late wickets leave title shootout in balance as Lancashire encourage supporters' speculations

  • Strife at Essex as board calls for inquest into drinking culture

Essex in reply were rambunctious from the outset. Nick Browne and Alastair Cook had written off nearly half the deficit inside the first six overs before both men nicked to slip in the space of the next four balls – Cook’s innings of 18 from 17, with four expansive fours, another flighty display from a batter who has seemed all season to be tiring of the hard yards that for so many years have been his calling card.There was to be no let-up in Essex’s appetite, however, as they surged into the lead inside 15 overs, and squandered two more wickets in the process – Josh Rymell losing his off stump to a length ball from Procter, and Lawrence, with six fours in a bristling 33, choosing the wrong length from which to chase his seventh, as he scuffed a low drive to the substitute Gareth Berg at slip.The race to the bottom continued as Paul Walter and Adam Wheater swung for a defendable lead, as if attempting to set up a run-chase in a rain-ruined title decider – they’ve certainly had some practice in that regard in recent years. Tellingly, there wasn’t a single lbw in Essex’s innings, as Jack White and Tom Taylor earned their four wickets apiece through a probing off-stump line, inviting aggression and as often as not a nibble to the cordon. In its own way, a total of 170 all out, at nearly four runs an over, made as little sense as the ineptitude that had preceded it.But it was soon to be put back into context as Essex’s seamers swaggered back out for the second-innings kill. Two balls into his resumption, Sam Cook aimed full and straight, and pinned Vasconcelos on the pad for the eighth lbw out of 11 Northants dismissals in the day. Before his day’s work was done, he had delivered Simon Kerrigan a first-day pair – a rare ignominy on a day packed with them – then added Rob Keogh for good measure before taking the wind out of Sales. There’s not a lot of fight left in this one. But at least it was glorious weather for a drubbing.

Young Middlesex bowlers hold nerve to secure a six-run win over Lancashire

Middlesex’s young bowlers just about held their nerve to secure a six-run win over Lancashire in a magnificent Royal London Cup match at Emirates Old Trafford.Defending 257, the visitors were indebted to 20-year-old leg spinner Luke Hollman, who took 4 for 56, but the visitors had to withstand a late assault from Danny Lamb, whose 21-ball 33 looked as though it might win the game until he was bowled by Ethan Bamber when four balls remained in the game.Middlesex’s total owed much to Sam Robson’s 81-ball 76 and also to Martin Andersson’s partnerships with tailenders Thilan Wallalawita and Bamber that saw 67 runs added for the last two wickets in less than ten oversThe visitors probably envisaged making an even bigger total when they were 80 for 1 in the 18th over but Stevie Eskinazi became the second of his side’s batters after Josh de Caires to be caught by Lamb when he top-edged a rank full-toss from George Balderson to fine leg where the Lancashire all-rounder dived full length to clutch the ball in his right hand.Eskinazi’s departure for 45 was followed by that of the Middlesex skipper Peter Handscomb for 14 seven overs later and once again Lamb literally had a hand in things when he dived backwards from short fine-leg to take a one-handed snare off Jack Morley.Related

  • Hamish Rutherford fifty keeps Glamorgan punching for knock-out place

  • Yorkshire batters dominate Warwickshire in high-scoring victory

  • Tom Westley's patient 71 leads Essex to thrilling two-wicket win over Gloucestershire

By that stage Robson had reached his fifty off 54 balls and the four-day opener continued to bat fluently despite injuring his groin and needing a runner. Robbie White was caught behind off leg-spinner Luke Wells for 18 and that wicket started a collapse that saw Middlesex decline from 154 for 3 to 190 for 8 in nine overs.Three of the five wickets were taken in eight balls by Tom Bailey, who finished with 3 for 33 and was clearly the pick of his side’s attack. Indeed Bailey was the only bowler to concede less than five runs an over and Wallalawita helped himself to two sixes and a couple of fours when Jack Morley and Liam Hurt’s radar malfunctioned. Andersson ended the innings unbeaten on 42.Lacashire’s reply began badly as both Josh Bohannon and Wells fell to Bamber and James Harris for single-figure scores but Keaton Jennings and Rob Jones had put on 63 in some comfort before Jennings injured his calf when setting off to complete a leg bye.Following treatment he was helped from the field in obvious pain but Jones and Steven Croft added a further 77 before Croft fell to Hollman for 41. Balderson then hit de Caires for two sixes over the short leg-side but both he and Jones were dismissed by Hollman, whose eighth over was crucial in deciding the outcome.Jones was caught by de Caires at long-off for a career-best List A score of 72 but that only prompted Lamb’s defiant assault that nearly brought Lancashire a famous victory. Jennings’ injury prevented him coming out to bat when Lancashire’s ninth wicket fell.

Shamsi emerges as potential day-night trump card

Just like Kyle Abbott is not exactly sure when he is going to be able to make the move ball move, Tabraiz Shamsi does not really know whether the Australian batsmen can pick him, but as long as the wickets come, he does not mind the uncertainty.”That’s the theory going around and with theories, you can’t say it’s a given thing because it’s not a proven thing,” Shamsi said at the MCG where his 4 for 72 against a Victoria XI put him in line for a Test debut. “I am really happy with the way I have gone personally against them.”Shamsi was picked for the Test squad on the back of a stellar 2015-16 first-class season – he was joint-second on the wicket-charts with 41 scalps at 19.97 – and performances in shorter formats which suggested he could be a handful. Shamsi took 3 for 36 in his third ODI against Australia in Port Elizabeth last month and was South Africa A’s third-highest wicket-taker in a 50-over quadrangular series in Australia this winter.The talk in South Africa is that Shamsi’s variations render batsmen illiterate and that he was brought on this tour specifically to play in Adelaide. He was seen practising with the pink ball on his own during the Hobart Test and even though it may be harsh on Keshav Maharaj, who also debuted on this tour, South Africa may want to use Shamsi as a trump card in the day-night fixture.Shamsi confirmed the pink ball wears “a lot more than the red ball”, and is therefore more likely to bring spinners into the game. Wristpin with a pink ball has emerged as particularly tricky for batsmen and even though Shamsi is not sure of exactly how difficult it is, he hopes he can prove a handful anyway.”There’s a theory about legspinners and batsmen not picking it,” Shamsi said. “The guys say it’s harder to pick the seam off the legspinners so maybe there is a difference but at the end of the day you have to put the ball in the right areas.”Conceding more than six an over, as Shamsi did in the warm-up match, may not speak much for his disciplines which may be why Shamsi continues to be coy about his chances of playing. It’s almost as if he knows that he travelled as a reserve, or a surprise package, and is focusing more on being part of the Test squad than the starting XI. “That’s not up to me [if I debut],” he said. “I’ve just got to go and do my bit. If it comes I’ll be happy. If it doesn’t, the team is doing well so either way it’s a win-win situation.”Like his team-mates, Shamsi repeated the mantra that South Africa are not merely satisfied with a series win. They want a whitewash too. “We came here to win the series. We’ve done that. Our mission is not over yet. We are going to try and win the series 3-nil.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus