Namibia coach optimistic despite big defeat

Namibia Under-19s may have slumped to an eight-wicket defeat, but Norbert Manyande, the team’s coach, was happy that Bangladesh Under-19 took his side seriously. Manyande claimed that the grass had been shaved off from the pitch at the Sheikh Kamal International Cricket Stadium in order to counter Namibia’s pace attack.”Bangladesh knew our seam bowling is very good for the way we bowled against South Africa and against Scotland as well,” Manyande said. “We have been here [in Cox’s Bazar] for two weeks and have played in this venue once and today was the first time I saw the pitch without grass. So we definitely gave them something to think about. Whether people will accept that or not, that’s up to them.”Once we give a Test side to think of something like that then we know that we are here not to mess around, we are here to play cricket. And they did their homework, they are the home side and the won the game. There is no doubt that they played really well and we learned a lot out of it as well.”Manyande felt Namibia now go into the quarter-final against India having learned more about playing spin, though they were shot out for 65 in 32.5 overs against Bangladesh.”Moving forward, I don’t think we are going to face any spin attack as good as Bangladesh, as far as we have seen so far. So moving forward we are quite confident that we will still be able to win one or two games and surprise someone again.”We are here to compete. We have learned a lot from spin bowling from the Bangladesh game. In the next game we are looking to improve a lot more facing the spin bowling.”

Wadiyar defeats Viswanath in Karnataka elections

Brijesh Patel retained his post as KSCA secretary © AFP

Srikanta Datta Narasimharaja Wadiyar, the scion of the Mysore royal family, has been elected president of the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) after he defeated Gundappa Viswanath, the former Indian Test cricketer. Wadiyar polled 553 votes in a closely-fought, high-profile election, the likes of which the state association witnessed for the first time in nine years. Viswanath polled 516 votes, losing by the slim margin of 37 votes.Brijesh Patel, who unseated C Nagaraj nine years ago and has held sway as the secretary since then, held onto his post, albeit by a slim margin, polling 568 votes. Brijesh, the former Indian batsman, defeated G Kasturi Rangan, who claimed 475 votes, losing by 93.In all a little over 1080 votes were cast, a record turn-out for KSCA elections. With both groups campaigning heavily, and doing their utmost to get people to vote – more than 20 very elderly and infirm life members came through in wheelchairs to participate in the elections – the process reached a crescendo. When Brijesh won the last high profile election approximately 800 votes were cast, and this election easily surpassed that.Overall the Wadiyar group won a slim majority, with 13 of their candidates getting elected, as opposed to 11 from the Brijesh group. Crucially, Select Cricket Club was one of the Institutional Life Members from the Bangalore Zone to win, and it is headed by Vijay Mallya, the industrialist, who recently announced his decision to make a foray into Karnataka cricket administration.Two vice-presidents from the Brijesh faction, Roger Binny (582 votes), the former Indian Test allrounder, and Dr S Krishnamurthy (530) won, while PR Ashok Anand (530) was elected as vice-president from the Wadiyar camp.The vital post of treasurer went to Thallam Venkatesh (530), from the Brijesh camp, who beat Jagannath (490) by the margin of 44 votes in what local experts considered a genuine upset.Wadiyar had brief words with the press who were gathered at the KSCA, saying, “We’ve got overall 13 candidates and its up to the rival group to work with us,” amidst choruses of his supporters chanting . When asked how he would work with arch-rival Brijesh, Wadiyar only said, “Yes, I know he’s won the election. Wait till tomorrow. It’s too early to say.” It’s worth noting that Wadiyar, in the run-up to the elections had quoted the old axiom: politics makes for strange bedfellows.In almost stark contrast to Wadiyar, a visibly emotional Viswanath did his best to keep his composure when chatting to the media. “As a player I always expected to do well. Same was the case here. I thought I’d do well in the elections,” said the man who scored 6000-plus Test runs and still remains one of the most swashbuckling batsmen the country has produced. “But, even as a player I’ve lost a few matches. I accept the verdict here. I’m still hopeful of playing well and this is not the end of the story.”Mallya, the other high-profile figure in the elections, was typically dramatic in the statement he made. “I know it’s a kind of a coalition set up. But I’ll help both parties function well,” he said. “My commitment to Karnataka cricket and the KSCA is total.” A late entrant into the fray in these elections, it is believed that Mallya’s real interest lies in administration of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) – especially the meetings of the marketing and finance committees – to which he will gain an entry through the KSCA. Interestingly, he stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the BCCI when asked about the Indian Cricket League (ICL). “Mr Pawar has taken the game one level up and he’s running the game ably. I don’t see why I should support the ICL.”At the end of the day, the elections at the KSCA assumed significance at the national level thanks to the profile various protagonists enjoy. How this will eventually pan out, at the state and national level, remains to be seen.Full list of winners (Votes polled in brackets)President Srikanta Datta Narasimharaja Wadiyar (553)Secretary Brijesh Patel (568)Vice-presidents 1 Roger Binny (582) 2, Dr S Krishnamurthy (530) 3 PR Ashok Anand (530)Treasurer Thallam Venkatesh (530)Managing Committee 1 AV Jayaprakash (605) 2 Sudhakar Rao (582 ) 3 J Abhiram (551) 4 Raghuram Bhatt (533) 5 Sanjay Desai (514) 6 Lakshminarayan (507)Institutional MembersBangalore Zone – 1 Jawahar Sports Club (620) 2 Select Cricket Club (564) 3 Bangalore Cricketers 555 4 Malleshwaram United Cricket Club (539) 5 Swastika Union CC (515) 6 Mount Joy CC (502)Mysore Zone – National CC (563)Shimoga Zone – Durgigudi SC (525)Tumkur Zone – Tumkur Occasionals (556)Mangalore Zone – Mangalore Sports Club (554)Dharwar Zone – Hubli SC (530)Raichur Zone – Perfect SC (494)

Sri Lanka aim for emphatic win

Sri Lanka may have been a bit short of match practice in the first match in Mohali © AFP

The margin of defeat in the first game of the Champions Trophy – 37 runs – as Bangladesh succumbed to Sri Lanka was not an accurate reflection of the match as a competition. Sri Lanka had played their opponents well out of the game, and it was only a last-minute dash from Mashrafe Mortaza, heaving the bat merrily for 30, that took Bangladesh towards their target. Sri Lanka probably won’t have to worry about a repeat of that happening at the Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium in Ahmedabad, as they take on Zimbabwe.Again, it’s not going to be every day that Zimbabwe are rolled over as badly as they were – for only 85 by West Indies – so fans will be hoping to get a bit more from the game. And there’s no reason why that hope should go unfounded. The likes of Stuart Matsikenyeri and Brendan Taylor, if they get going, should ensure that the team does not collapse for sub-100 totals in consecutive games.The dilemma for Sri Lanka is an unusual one. Despite recent runs of form that has seen them brush aside teams with a confidence and nous reminiscent of Sri Lankan teams of the late nineties where they won virtually every tournament, there has been the suggestion that they were a bit short of match practice. This seemed to be the case in the first game against Bangladesh where the bowling was undisciplined and they did not go for the kill when they had the opposition on the mat.When they take on Zimbabwe, they will be hoping to win the toss, if only so they can have a bat. That would ensure that they at least got some batting practice in, and maybe then, in the face of a huge total, Zimbabwe would spend some time at the crease, giving Sri Lanka’s bowlers a chance to get through their paces. On the contrary, if they chose to bowl, there’s every chance that Zimbabwe could be shot out cheaply – Sri Lanka have dismissed them for 150 or less as many as six times, twice horribly, for 38 and 35.”If we win the toss we’ll be batting or bowling, not on the basis of the opposition, but on the basis of conditions and the gameplan,” Tom Moody, the coach of the Sri Lankan team, insisted on the eve of the match. “If the wicket’s dry and it looks like it’s going to be best to bat on first, then we’ll do that.”Mahela Jayawardene, leading the side though Marvan Atapattu is back in the mix after recovering from a back injury, for his part, did not rule out some players being rested as they continued with a rotation policy to keep players fresh. “We might think of rotating a few guys,” he said. “We haven’t finalised that yet, and we’ll do that after we have a good look at the wicket. We don’t have too many options, only 14 guys here, so depending on what the team needs we’ll think about it.”There’s really only one way tomorrow’s match can unfold as a thriller – if Sri Lanka slip up badly, get utterly complacent, collectively fail to apply themselves. Long Tom certainly will be drilling this into his team’s heads before they take the field. “Quite clearly we’ll be approaching this game just like any other – whether it’s Zimbabwe, England, Australia or India it makes no difference,” he said, perhaps a touch too emphatically. “My emphasis to the players will be that we’re going in to win this match, the opposition is irrelevant. Zimbabwe didn’t have the start that they wanted against the West Indies, but that doesn’t count for anything against us. Whether they have world-class players in their side or not is not relevant. If anyone thinks they can come into a match like this with a foot off the gas and not quite switched on they can be in for a rude shock.”

Weekes heroics again in vain

Northamptonshire 261 for 6 (45 overs, Shafayat 85, White 57, Love 56) beat Middlesex 247 for 9 ( Weekes 111, by 14 runs
Scorecard
Points table

Paul Weekes: 111 in a losing cause © Getty Images

A battling hundred from Paul Weekes was not enough to give Middlesex victory over Northamptonshire, a result which effectively ends their chances of catching leaders Essex as well as easing Northamptonshire’s relegation fears.Middlesex were always off the pace once Martin Love (56) and Robert White (57) had posted a first-wicket stand of 117, and then Bilal Shafayat smashed 85 off 46 balls to guide Northants to a daunting 261 for 6.Weekes anchored Middlesex’s response, and with Ed Smith (42) got the innings off to a good start with a stand of 105. When these two sides met at Lord’s in the C&G Trophy earlier in theseason, Weekes scored 105 (and, coincidently, Smith 42) only for Middlesex to fall away in the closing overs, losing their last six wickets for eight runs.This game followed a similar pattern as the dismissal of Ed Joyce triggered a collapse in which Middlesex lost six wickets for 38, and with it their momentum.

Lancashire gain confidence in the Cape

Lancashire’s good start to their pre-season tour of South Africa continued with a win in their second match.An unbeaten 47 from Alec Swann was the outstanding performance of an 84-run win over Boland Academy in Cape Town over the weekend. “He played very well”, Mike Watkinson, Lancashire’s cricket manager, said. “But it was a good allround performance. Other batters made scores, our pace attack was too good for their lads and we took three top slip catches.”Half-centuries from Iain Sutcliffe and Mark Chilton contributed to a healthy final score of 242 for 4. Boland replied with 158, with Glen Chapple finishing with 3 for 14 and Dominic Cork 1 for 11 from 7 overs. Sajid Mahmood and John Wood also put in valuable performances.The tour kicked off with a win over Claremont last Friday.

Practice and media sessions

Sri Lanka has practice sessions on Thursday and Friday at Buffalo Park from 10:00 to 13:00. After nets on Friday there will be a press conference with Sanath Jayasuriya and Dav Whatmore at Buffalo Park. The conference is timed for 13.00, but could start any time from 12.30.Sri Lanka manager, Ajit Jayasekera, has requested that media do not seek interviews with individual players for the entire period they are in East London. The only opportunity for media access will be at Friday’s press conference.Zimbabwe arrive in East London at 12.05 on Thursday and will net on Friday from 14.00-17.00.Media access to be confirmed by East London MLO David Denison: 083 708 2735India will make their coach and one of the players available for interview after training at Centurion today (Wednesday) at 12.30pm.New Zealand will be practicing at Centurion from 3pm today (Wednesday). There are no formal media arrangements planned. Former South Africa Test bowler Steve Elworthy will be among the nets bowlers and will be available to speak to the media.On Thursday both teams are practicing at Centurion, New Zealand in the morning and India in the afternoon. There will be pre-match press conferences with both teams at Centurion on Thursday, these are likely to be around the middle of the day.Media Contacts: – Centurion MLO Marc Friedman: 082 902 4943 – India media manager: Amrit Mathur 084 513 5706 – NZ media manager: Simon Wilson 083 419 7632

Chemplast defeat Roofit XI by five wickets in final

Shrugging off a poor start, Chemplast, Chennai completed a five wicketvictory over Roofit XI, Mumbai to win the Coromandel Cement Cup in theKSCA Diamond Jubilee invitation tournament at the MaharajaJayachamdaraja Wodayar Sports Centre in Bangalore on Wednesday.Roofit XI, who were 143 for eight in their second innings at close ofplay on the second day after gaining a first innings lead of 13 runswere all out without adding any run. Left arm spinner R Ramkumar tookboth wickets to finish with three for 24 off 6.4 overs.This left Chemplast a target of 157 in the allotted 40 overs. But theymade a a shocking start. Sujith Somasundar (2), S Badrinath (3) andAditya Srikkanth (0) were out with only 27 runs on the board. Howeverthe other opener Jinju Joseph and skipper Ajay Kudua put the inningsback on the rails with a fourth wicket stand of 91 runs off 19.3overs. By the time Joseph was out for 61 off 84 balls with seven hitsto the ropes, Chemplast were well on the road to victory. Kudua and JHariesh (29 not out) then virtually finished the job but with thescores level, Kudua was out for 54. He faced 74 balls and hit sixfours. Off the next ball, Hariesh got the winning boundary.

Mark Waugh strikes form for the Blues

Mark Waugh answered his critics today in the New South Wales Blues’ decisive seven-wicket victory over Queensland in the Mercantile Mutual Cup at Bankstown Oval.Returning from a short break due to back trouble and under fire for his form for Australia, the 35 year-old Waugh scored 108 not out on the ground where he cut his teeth in grade cricket as New South Wales overhauled the Queensland total of 247 with fourteen balls to spare.With Waugh at the finish was Michael Bevan, who scored the winning runs with a four to bring up his own half-century.In front of a sellout crowd of around 4300, Queensland captain Stuart Law won the toss and elected to bat first in fine but overcast conditions.Openers Matthew Hayden and Jimmy Maher made a promising start to the innings, before left-arm paceman Nathan Bracken made the first breakthrough of the day. Replacing Brett Lee at the southern end, Bracken’s first ball of the day was bowled wide of the off stump to Hayden, who chased it and got an edge to wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, who took the ball in front of first slip. Hayden made 14 of an opening partnership of 30.Maher and the incoming batsman Martin Love took advantage of the small Bankstown Oval to despatch any loose deliveries to the fence, and at the end of the first fifteen overs Queensland were 1/73. The next over saw Maher loft Bracken for the first six of the day (which was dropped by a spectator).In the nineteenth over, Maher was in sight of his half-century when he mistimed a slower dipping delivery from MacGill, giving Glenn McGrath an easy catch at mid-off. Maher faced 61 deliveries for his 48 and struck seven fours and a six.Andrew Symonds surprisingly came to the crease ahead of Stuart Law. The change of order made little difference. MacGill’s first delivery to Symonds was a top-spinner which kept straight and low and deceived the Queensland all-rounder. Symonds was gone lbw for a golden duck and the Bulls were 3/88.Stuart Law survived the hat-trick ball, but in the next over from Shane Lee he was given out caught behind to a ball which he appeared to have edged to wicketkeeper Haddin. Video replays indicated that the ball apparently missed the edge of the bat and brushed Law’s back pad. Law appeared to be asking umpire Hair as he left the field whether he was out caught or lbw – in either case, the ball seemed headed on a trajectory which would have cleared the stumps. Law made 4 and Queensland were 4/98.Clinton Perren replaced Law at the crease and struggled against MacGill and Shane Lee. After facing fifteen scoreless deliveries, a frustrated Perren chased a wideish MacGill delivery and slashed it straight to Bracken at point. The Bulls had lost their last four wickets for the addition of 28 runs.Lee Carseldine joined Love, who brought up his fifty in the thirtieth over by lofting Brett Lee over the midwicket fence, just wide of one of the Mercantile Mutual signs. Love’s fifty came from 64 deliveries, including six fours and a six.Martin Love and Lee Carseldine built a steady recovery between the thirtieth and fortieth overs. Love hit Shane Lee for two consecutive sixes to mid-wicket, but four balls later the Queensland batsman chipped to short mid-on where Mark Higgs took a smart catch close to the ground. Love scored 82 from 101 deliveries. Queensland were 6/188 after forty, and back on track for a score around 250.Brett Lee was brought back into the attack at the start of the 44th over and struck immediately. He pitched a ball very short to Carseldine, who was advancing down the pitch. Carseldine played a cramped hook shot off his gloves straight into the air, with the bowler taking the return catch almost face-to-face with the batsman. Carseldine had scored a valuable 33.With Queensland reaching 7/214 after 45 overs, Lee struck twice in his next over. He bowled a bouncer to Scott Prestwidge – who used to play grade cricket at Bankstown Oval – who attempted a misjudged pull shot, lofted to the waiting hands of Michael Slater at mid-on.Three balls later, Wade Seccombe (15) played an uppish cover drive straight to Steve Waugh. Queensland were 9/215.Creevey and Bichel, both with useful track records with the bat, steered the Bulls through the final overs before each claiming a six off Brett Lee’s tenth, and NSW’s 50th, over. Creevey hooked a short ball which just cleared the Mr Whippy van at backward square leg, before Bichel lifted a short ball over mid-wicket.That final over, in which 21 runs were scored, was the only blemish in a fine exhibition of pace bowling by Lee, who finished with the figures of 3/54. MacGill took 3/44 from his ten, while Shane Lee (2/42 from seven) and Nathan Bracken (1/39 from nine) were the other wicket-takers.Glenn McGrath’s lack of penetration must be a cause of concern, however. Today he took 0/43 from ten overs. Discounting a game of grade cricket yesterday, his last three appearances for Australia and New South Wales have been worth figures of 29-1-152-0.Chasing 248 for victory, Mark Waugh, back in the side after being rested last week through injury, opening the batting with Michael Slater, got the Blues off to a strong start against a Queensland attack lacking Kasprowicz, Dale and Muller. Fifty runs were scored in the first twelve overs, but the thirteenth over of the day saw Andy Bichel strike twice.Slater (29 from 45 balls) failed to get his timing right to a short ball from Bichel and holed out to Clinton Perren at long off. Four balls later, Brad Haddin, the man of the match against the Bushrangers last Sunday, attempted a cover drive, getting a thick edge which was taken by a diving Matthew Hayden at gully.Steve Waugh came to the crease with the score 2/52, and together with his brother proceeded to dominate an attack lacking a spin bowler. Promising paceman Ashley Noffke was perhaps the tidiest of the Queensland bowlers in the opening stages. Brendon Creevey began his spell off a short run, and when this proved ineffective reverted to his normal run-up. Andrew Symonds’ three over spell yielded 29 runs, including a six by Steve Waugh dropped by the lad outside the mid-wicket fence. Mark’s fifty came from 71 deliveries, including six fours.Steve’s innings came to an end one run short of his own half-century, when he edged a ball from former Bankstown team-mate Scott Prestwidge into the gloves of Wade Seccombe. The Blues captain took exactly 49 balls to score his 49 runs, hitting eight fours and a six.Bevan joined Mark Waugh at the crease, and with all the experience of 366 one-day internationals between them, the rest of the innings was a formality. Never rushed, and never troubled by a Queensland team which lacked the variety of a specialist spinner, they put together an unbeaten fourth-innings partnership of 105 runs in 19 overs to complete the victory.Waugh’s second one-day hundred for the Blues was completed at the end of the 45th over when he took a single off Andrew Symonds. Waugh’s 100 took 127 deliveries and included eleven boundaries. It completed a remarkable double for the Waugh twins – Mark scoring a century in Bankstown Oval’s first Mercantile Mutual Cup game after Steve made a hundred in the ground’s first Sheffield Shield game four years ago.Bevan’s fifty – his fourteenth for the Blues without ever breaking the ton – came from 60 deliveries including four fours, the last of which was pulled over mid-wicket off the bowling of Noffke to end the game.Mark Waugh unsurprisingly won the man of the match award. The Blues now advance to nine points after two games at the top of the Mercantile Mutual Cup ladder. They play the Victorian Bushrangers at Punt Road, Richmond, next Sunday, and will be keen to take further advantage of their international stars while still available. The Bulls next Mercantile Mutual Cup game is a day-nighter at the WACA against the Western Warriors on November 15.

Hafeez, Azhar stay away from camp due to Amir's presence

Pakistan’s ODI captain Azhar Ali and veteran allrounder Mohammad Hafeez have chosen to stay away from the ongoing conditioning camp in Lahore, apparently due to Mohammad Amir’s inclusion among the probables for the camp. Azhar confirmed that he had stayed away because of Amir and Pakistan’s team media manager, Agha Akbar, said Hafeez’s absence was also apparently for the same reason.Amir, who is in the selection mix after serving a five-year ban for his role in the 2010 spot-fixing scandal, was one of the 26 probables named for the pre-season conditioning camp in the build-up to the New Zealand tour. Both Hafeez and Azhar were playing domestic matches in Karachi and had missed the first three days of the camp which began on December 21. They were scheduled to join the camp on Thursday, but Agha Akbar confirmed that the pair did not train with the side.”Both are not joining the training camp today apparently because of Mohammad Amir,” Akbar told ESPNcricinfo.Azhar was more direct. “I will not attend the camp as long as Amir is there,” he said. “This is my decision and we are open to discuss with the PCB. I don’t want to comment on Hafeez’s decision, but we both have the same stance.'”In November, Hafeez had reportedly turned down an offer in the Bangladesh Premier League from the Chittagong Vikings franchise, who had enlisted Amir. Hafeez told ESPNcricinfo that he could not play “with any player who has tarnished and brought a bad name to the country”, but was open to accepting an offer from a different franchise. He stressed that this was his personal opinion.In November 2011, Amir – along with Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif – was sentenced in a London Court on charges conspiracy to accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat at gambling after a plot was uncovered in a sting operation to bowl deliberate no-balls in a Test against England in 2010. Amir was given a six-month jail sentence and served half of it at the Portland Young Offenders Institution in DorsetHe was also given a five-year ban by the ICC, and his suspension period formally ended on September 1 this year. Amir had been allowed to return to cricket ahead of schedule by the ICC in January and has since featured in Pakistan’s domestic T20 and first-class competitions. He was also a part of the BPL 2015-16, playing nine matches for the Chittagong Vikings franchise.

Record-breaking Godleman stars for England

ScorecardBilly Godleman struck the highest score by an England Under-19 batsman in one-day internationals as the team kept alive their hopes of squaring the series against Pakistan Under-19s with an 80-run win at Grace Road. Godleman and Adam Lyth added 126 for the second wicket as England piled up their biggest total at this level then Steven Finn’s four wickets meant Pakistan couldn’t get close.The day after the senior side comprehensively beat India at The Rose Bowl, the U-19s put in an equally impressive display. The 36-run defeat at Northampton left England facing a must-win situation to retain any interest in the series. Godleman and Alex Wakely laid a solid base with an opening stand of 100 before Lyth arrived and increased the scoring rate.Godleman showed the skills which have earned him a place in Middlesex’s Championship side and why many believe he is an England opener in the waiting. He was strong through the off side and paced his innings to perfection, expanding during the closing overs and surpassing such household names as Michael Vaughan and Mike Gatting.Lyth’s 75 took 65 balls and although the middle succumbed to a series of wild swings, the momentum was never lost and England scored more than 100 off the last 10 overs.Pakistan needed a rapid start if they were to chase down the runs, but weren’t helped when opener Shan Masood was unable to take his place after picking up a finger injury in the field. Finn produced a superb opening spell and removed Umar Amin, who has been one Pakistan’s leading batsmen on the tour.Usman Salahuddin again showed good form, but was forced to retire hurt with cramp when Pakistan needed to accelerate. Left-arm spinner Liam Dawson removed Ali Asad and Imad Wasim in three balls as the middle order tried hit out and got out. Although Salahuddin returned to completed a battling half-century, and Masood showed what Pakistan had missed in the top order, the contest was long since over.The final match of the series takes place on the same ground on Thursday.

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