Chanderpaul hundred lifts West Indies

Scorecard
Shivnarine Chanderpaul warmed up for Thursday’s first Test at Lord’s with an unbeaten hundred, as West Indies took the chance for some useful batting practice on the final day of their three-day match against Sri Lanka A at Shenley.By stumps, Chanderpaul was unbeaten on 104 from 146 balls, which represented a welcome return to form seeing as he had not topped 32 since the beginning of the NatWest Series. Sylvester Joseph also gave the selectors a nudge with his 68, to follow on from a first-innings 114, although he is less likely to feature at Lord’s.Omari Banks produced his second assured innings of the match, an unbeaten 29, as West Indies closed on a healthy 283 for 5. Earlier they had decided against enforcing the follow-on, despite securing a first-innings lead of 188, after bowling Sri Lanka out for 346. That effort owed much to Tino Best, who ripped out the tail to finish with 4 for 47 in his 11 overs.Sri Lanka’s wicketkeeper, Prasanna Jayawardene, was left stranded on 48 not out, as West Indies took control. But, on the plus side for the Sri Lankans, they at least preserved their unbeaten record, after sweeping to seven wins out of seven in the one-day leg of the tour. They now have two matches of their stop-over remaining, against Glamorgan and Somerset.

Bond fears lengthy lay-off

New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond could be facing a long lay-off as a result of a back injury he picked up during Sunday’s ODI against Pakistan.Bond limped out of the match after bowling five overs, and there are fears that he may have a stress fracture in his lower back. “He’s got a terrible lower back strain," explained Jeff Crowe, New Zealand’s team manager. "We’re going to get a scan on Shane’s back when we get to Colombo.”Bond will almost certainly miss Tuesday’s one-dayer against Sri Lanka at Dambulla, and Stephen Fleming admitted that his absence had already been discussed. “You can’t replace Shane easily," he said, "but if he doesn’t play we’ll bring in Kyle Mills or Andre Adams.”Crowe added that Paul Wiseman had been asked to stay with the squad in case Bond’s injury does turn out to be serious. Wiseman was originally brought in as cover for Daniel Vettori.

Surrey frustrated by Yorkshire's third-wicket stand

Surrey have not found it easy in their effort for quick wickets in Yorkshire’s second innings with Michael Vaughan and Anthony McGrath battling it out with an unbroken century-stand for the third wicket at the AMP Oval.Their half-centuries, similar in style with Vaughan reaching his from 68 balls with the help of seven boundaries and McGrath taking 63 balls, hitting eight fours, have been a barrier that Surrey were unable to overcome for nearly an hour and a half.Before that Yorkshire had lost both their opening batsmen for 65 after 20 overs, having enjoyed a first-wicket stand of 57.For the second successive day bad light interrupted play with six overs deducted for stoppage late in the day. When play resumed, eight overs were bowled to stumps with Yorkshire taking their second innings total to 171 for two and reducing Surrey’s first innings lead to 110.This situation sets up an interesting final day’s play with Surrey striving for victory and having already achieved maximum batting and bowling points, an outright win, giving them 20 points will lessen their relegation fears as they go into their final match of the season next week.Earlier, in a little over an hour’s batting, following lunch, Surrey hit 79 with the help of Martin Bicknell’s 36 runs to increase their total to a massive 516 for nine before declaring. Bicknell had struck five boundaries and a six before having his off stump uprooted by Matthew Hoggard.But the significant wicket to fall during that brief period was that of Ben Hollioake who, upon reaching 118, fell lbw offering no stroke to a ball from McGrath who had been brought on for the first time in the day and he obliged with his first-ball wicket.The most successful Yorkshire bowler, however, was Andy Gray who finished with four of the nine wickets to fall for 128 runs from 39 overs in his second Championship match for the county.The declaration came with Surrey holding a substantial first innings lead of 281 which was reduced to 231 after Yorkshire were 51 without loss from 16 overs at tea.This morning a highly productive sixth-wicket stand between Mark Ramprakash and Ben Hollioake had put Surrey in a position of strength in this Cricinfo Championship match with a huge first innings lead of 202 with four wickets remaining at the dismissal of Ramprakash.They had extended their unbroken overnight partnership of 69 to 215 by lunch, taking the total to 437 when Ramprakash was bowled by Gray in the last over of the morning session for a superb 131, which he scored at the rate of a run every two balls and hit 17 boundaries.During the course of this magnificent stand, both batsmen reached centuries. Ramprakash, having batted for nearly four and a half hours, reached his third first-class hundred for Surrey and his fourth of the summer, having hit one in the last Ashes Test at The Oval.Ben Hollioake’s 150-ball century was his first for Surrey and the third of his career, the previous two coming on tour of Sri Lanka with the England A team in 1997-98.

Meditation does the trick for Sudip Chatterjee

Sudip Chatterjee is a patient man and looks like a batsman cut out for first-class cricket. He takes his time to settle in, does not appear flustered if wickets fall in clumps at the other end, keeps his shots on the ground and sets himself up for long innings.It’s a lot like meditation. You need to be patient to get in the zone, not get distracted by what’s happening around you and develop a habit of being in one position for long durations. Both his first-class hundreds have been long innings – 192 off 303 balls and 145 off 247. Chatterjee’s unblemished concentration en route to his second century, at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, showed mediation had indeed a role to play in his innings.”I like to meditate a day or two before the match,” Chatterjee said after the day’s play. “I close my eyes, think about myself, my batting, and how to prepare for long innings.”His soft-spoken personality bears likeness to that of VVS Laxman, who had joined the Bengal team as batting consultant during their pre-season camp. On Thursday, it appeared Chatterjee had benefited from the advice he got from the former India batsman. Primarily a back-foot player, Chatterjee played the ball late, used his supple wrists to flick the ball whenever it was offered on his pads, and swept the spinners without much difficulty later on in the day.”He [Laxman] spent a week with us before we came here, so he helped me on my technique, the mentality… these things were covered,” Chatterjee said. “He told me a bit about my front foot. Keeping that in mind I worked on my front-foot game and it helped me in this match.”Chatterjee did it all when the team was in the dumps on their first day of the season. The onus was on the 23-year-old when he came in at 15 for 2 and saw two more wickets fall in the next nine overs. He was joined by Wriddhiman Saha, who has not been part of the action lately. Saha did score a fifty in his last match, against Sri Lanka in a Test, but was ruled out with a hamstring injury and was recovering when most of the other first-class players were playing matches around the country. Chatterjee said Saha’s presence helped him a lot and lifted the mood in the middle during the course of their 173-run stand that lasted nearly 50 overs.”I got great support from him [Saha],” Chatterjee said. “It’s not the first time such a thing happened. He always stays so positive on the field and whenever there’s a partnership with him it feels so good that he’s positive and we joke around in the middle, so it helps us.”We were under a bit of pressure early on since we were 40 [26] for 3, so my job was to take the team out of that position – to build a partnership and place the team in a good position. It’s our first Ranji Trophy match [of the season] and it was a successful day, so it feels good. It’s great to score a hundred in the first match and it will help my confidence.”Chatterjee is neither unfamiliar with the Karnataka attack nor with the role he has to play in his team. Last season, he was Bengal’s highest run-scorer with a tally of 584, and against Karnataka he had scored 57 and 59, albeit in a losing cause at home. His century on Thursday made it his third consecutive 50-plus score against the defending champions, and he hoped his runs would help his team get into a better position this time.”The pitch is good for batting and we still have a wicket left,” Chatterjee said. “If we get another 30-40 runs and score 350 it will be great. After that it’s up to our bowling and fielding. If we do those well, then we can surely defend it.

Shoaib fined for training camp exit

Shoaib Akhtar has been fined US$5000 by the Pakistan board for two breaches of the players’ code of conduct.According to Shafqat Naghmi, the PCB’s chief operating officer, Shoaib left the fitness and training camp in Karachi early and without permission.”Today also he was asked to appear before the disciplinary committee of the board but he didn’t show up,” Nagmi said. “He has also been docked 1.5 points from the total of 20 points available to the players for discipline in their central contracts.”Akhtar, who left the camp complaining of a stiff neck, was named in Pakistan’s 15-man squad yesterday for the Twenty20 World Championship and will make his long-awaited return to international cricket after being sidelined due to a drugs ban and various injuries.

Shreck gains new Trent Bridge deal

Charlie Shreck has been a consistent performer this summer © Martin Williamson

Charlie Shreck has been rewarded for his productive season with the ball with a new two-year contract at Trent Bridge.Shreck, who stands at 6ft 7ins, had 55 wickets in 10 matches before the start of the current Championship matches. That haul includes last week’s hat-trick against Middlesex at Lord’s and he is currently seventh in the first-class averages.He has battled back from a career-threatening back injury to become a vital member of the Nottinghamshire attack as they fight to avoid relegation one season after winning the Championship. Shreck only began his county career in 2003 after being spotted playing league cricket in his native Cornwall but missed the whole of last season after surgery for a stress fracture.He is now contracted at Trent Bridge until the end of 2008 and said: “This season has gone far better than I could have hoped, because after my injury I knew I had a job to do to earn my place back in the side.”Thankfully Mick Newell [the director of cricket] and Stephen Fleming have shown their faith in me and I’m delighted to have been able to justify that.”I’m really pleased about signing a new deal as there’s no other place I’d want to play. The whole package here is fantastic – the fans, the home ground and my team-mates in the dressing room. It’s top class and I’m aiming to help the team get back up and challenging for the Championship title again, as I believe that’s where we belong.”Shreck was also recently awarded his county cap and Newell added: “Charlie has been making up for lost time this summer and the fact that he’s come back so well from his injury is a great credit to him.”He overcame a lot of frustration missing out on playing last year and has returned as a better bowler. He’s been a consistent performer and I’m sure that he can go on to better things in years to come.”

Inverarity to stay on for third term at Warwickshire

Warwickshire’s coach John Inverarity will remain at Edgbaston for a third season, after he was persuaded to stay on by the club.Inverarity, 60, was considering a return to education after having retired from a 36-year teaching career which included being Headmaster of Hale School in Perth. His tenure in education had previously been briefly interrupted by a couple of inspirational stints as Kent’s coach, and then in 2003 he announced that he had called time on teaching as he took up the coaching position at Edgbaston.However, after considering his options, he has now agreed to stay on with Warwickshire in a bid to spur them to further success, as they try to repeat this year’s Championship-winning triumph. Inverarity, who played six Tests for Australia, struck up a winning partnership with Warwickshire’s captain, Nick Knight and the club are relieved to have secured his services for another term.”Everybody at the club is delighted with news that John will be back with us again next season,” Dennis Amiss, Warwickshire’s chief executive, told Warwickshire CCC’s official website. “He and Nick Knight work so well together, and now they can keep building.”

Matthew Elliott drafted into Australian squad

Matthew Elliott and Shane Warne chat in the nets ahead of the first Test at Darwin© Getty Images

Matthew Elliott, the Victorian opening batsman, has been recalled to the Australian team to fill the gap left by Ricky Ponting, who has had to drop out of the squad for the first Test against Sri Lanka because of a bereavement.Cricket Australia announced that Elliott would be Ponting’s replacement for the first Test, which begins at Darwin on Thursday. Elliott, 33, returns to the Australian team after a gap of more than five years: he last played against West Indies in Barbados in March 1999. His selection comes on the back of a run of fine form in the 2003-04 Pura Cup season, where he made 1381 runs from 11 matches at an average of 81.23.”I’m in a bit of a spin at the moment, but I’m just really excited to have this chance to be involved with the Australian team again,” said Elliott. “Even if it is for one match, it’s something that I’m thrilled about, and I’m looking forward to whatever opportunity presents itself over the coming days.”Trevor Hohns, the chairman of the national selection panel, justified Elliott’s selection by saying, “In this one-off situation, we felt that Matthew was the right replacement, given he has just come off a stint in the UK playing county cricket, and that has followed on from a fine summer in Australia. His form in the Pura Cup over the past few seasons has certainly turned heads.”This, however, is a selection that will raise the hackles of many cricket followers in Australia, who believe that Michael Clarke should have been selected. Clarke, although only 23, is widely regarded as the next bright batting prospect in the Australian firmament. Another player who might count himself unlucky is Martin Love, who made a century in his last Test, albeit against Bangladesh, only subsequently to lose his place in the national team.

Warwickshire eye Collins Obuya for overseas spot

According to George Dobell, writing in the Birmingham Post, Warwickshire are lining up Kenyan leg-spinner Collins Obuya as their second overseas player for the coming season. The county have not made any comment on the possibility.New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond has already signed a contract to take one of the overseas spots, but despite being linked with a number of players, none of the negotiations have borne fruit as yet.Obuya shot to prominence during the World Cup when the 21-year-old took five for 24 against Sri Lanka. In 28 one-day internationals he has taken 25 wickets at a cost of 45 apiece while his ten first-class matches have resulted in 27 wickets at 32.44. He is, however, learning all the time and could prove to be an interesting acquisition for Warwickshire.If he does sign, there is some doubt about who his captain will be. Michael Powell has broken a toe in the nets and will be out for some six weeks. Vice-captain Dougie Brown has taken over for the time being, but Nick Knight has had captaincy experience, leading the England A team to Kenya and Sri Lanka in 1998, while Mark Wagh captained Oxford University before joining the Warwickshire staff on a full-time basis.

Surrey is a big game for us says Shine

Speaking earlier this evening Somerset Coach Kevin Shine told me: “We are looking forward to tomorrow’s floodlit game against Surrey. It’s a big game in front of a big crowd for us.”He went on: “at the moment we are not performing very well in the white ball game, but we’re doing well in the CricInfo Championship and are through to the final at Lord’s, so we hope that we can build upon that. We need to put Sunday’s result behind us and put up a good performance at Taunton.”The side to play against Surrey is likely to include Mike Burns, who missed out on Sunday because he has had chickenpox. The final team selection will depend upon whether it is a batsman or a bowler who makes way for Burns.

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