Arthur bewildered over Proteas hara-kiri in opening Tests of series

Cape Town, Mar.25 (ANI): The poor performance of the South African cricket team in the opening match of a series has left coach Mickey Arthur frustrated.

Arthur said he failed to understand why his team always struggles to put on a credible show in the first Test of a series.

“I am frustrated with the situation. That is why we got together five days before the first Test rather than the usual three days,” the Die Burger newspaper quoted Arthur, as saying.

The 2-1 series defeat at home against the Aussies has obviously convinced Arthur to rethink his strategies, he genuinely believed his team could whitewash the Kangaroos at home especially after their spirited performance Down-Under.

Arthur now plans to organize training games ahead of home Test assignments.

“A two-day game will be ideal. The batsmen can bat for a day and the bowlers bowl on the other. It’s one thing, training, but you can’t underestimate the effect of game time,” he said.

The South African team has history of falling apart in the first encounter of home series, and it all started in 2006 when India handed out a shocking defeat to them at the Wanderers.

Similarly, a year later West Indies won the first test in Port Elizabeth.

Even in the game which saw them chasing a record 414 runs against the Aussies last year, the South Africans looked completely out of touch during the first three days of the game. (ANI)

Sri Lankan cricketers shot in Pakistan terror attack

Terror struck at the heart of cricket when masked gunmen attacked the bus carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team to the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. Five cricketers, including Mahela Jayawardene, the Sri Lankan captain, and his deputy Kumar Sangakkara, received minor injuries. The attack also left six security men and two civilians dead.

Ijaz Butt, the PCB chief, said the Test has been called off. Salman Tasheer, the Punjab governor, said a helicopter will soon evacuate the Sri Lankan players from Gaddafi Stadium and take them to a nearby airbase from where the team will fly back to Sri Lanka. Duleep Mendis, the Sri Lanka Cricket chief, said that they were “getting the team back [to Sri Lanka] today”.

There have been terror strikes on the peripheries of cricket, but this is the first time players have been directly targeted. The Sri Lankans were on their way to the Gaddafi Stadium when their bus was attacked by five armed terrorists near Liberty market. Habibur Rehman, chief commissioner of police, said 12 masked terrorists fired at the Sri Lankan team bus. The gunmen shot at the wheels of the bus and also injured the driver. A grenade was also thrown at the bus but it missed.

Jayawardene received a cut to the ankle while Sangakkara was injured in the shoulder. Thilan Samaraweera and Tharanga Paravitarana were the ones most seriously injured; both received shrapnels in the chest. Ajantha Mendis received a minor injury in the back.

“The bus came under attack as we were driving to the stadium, the gunmen targeted the wheels of the bus first and then the bus,” Mahela Jayawardene told Cricinfo. “We all dived to the floor to take cover. About five players have been injured and also Paul Farbrace [a member of the support staff], but most of the injuries appear to be minor at this stage and caused by debris.”
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Security concerns in Pakistan

* September 2001- New Zealand decide not to tour Pakistan following USA’s military action in Afghanistan in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. West Indies and Australia then decide to move their games in Pakistan scheduled for later in the year to neutral venues in Colombo and Sharjah.
* May 2002 – New Zealand cancel their tour of Pakistan after a bomb blast outside Karachi’s Sheraton Hotel where they were staying.
* March 2008 – Australia postpone their tour of Pakistan slated for the end of March as a result of security concerns.The decision was taken in the aftermath of Benazir Bhutto’s assasination in December 2007.
* October 2008 – West Indies call off a proposed tour of Pakistan scheduled for November citing security concerns, a week after the West Indies Women had cancelled the Pakistan leg of their Asian tour.
* December 2008 – The BCCI call off India’s scheduled tour of Pakistan in 2009 following a directive from the government.
* December 2008 – The PCB confirm that Sri Lanka will tour Pakistan after India decided not to after the Mumbai terror attack.
* February 2009 – The ICC decide not to stage the 2009 Champions Trophy in Pakistan after some of the members expressed reservations about touring the country.

Bottom Curve

Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, confirmed that the remainder of the tour had been cancelled. “We note with dismay and regret the events of this morning in Lahore and we condemn this attack without reservation.

“It is a source of great sadness that there have been a number of fatalities in this attack and it is also very upsetting for the wider cricket family that some of the Sri Lanka players and one match official have been injured in this attack. At this time our thoughts and prayers are with the injured people and also the families of those who have died.”

Television footage of several gunmen creeping through the trees, crouching to aim their kalashnikovs then running onto the next target were aired by Pakistan’s private channel Geo.

Chamra Ranavira, third secretary and press secretary at the Sri Lankan High Commission in Islamabad, said Samaraweera and Paranavitana had been admitted to hospital, but were out of danger now. “We are communicating with the Pakistan Cricket Board and the high commission has taken action to send the cricket team back home as soon as possible,” he said.

The reserve umpire Ahsan Raza was also injured in the attack. Nadeem Ghauri, the TV umpire, who was traveling in a bus behind the Sri Lanka team bus said the firing continued for some time. Umpire Steve Davis, who was on the team bus, called the terrorist attack “terrible”. “I’m lost for words,” he said.

Speaking from Sri Lanka, Sanath Jayasuriya said that it was an “extremely unfortunate incident. “We’ve never had this kind of problem,” Jayasuriya told CNN-IBN. “They are all safe, that’s the good news I got when I spoke to Kumar. I don’t think they’ll stay back and play. I think they will come back as soon as possible. Depends on the injuries.”

Speaking on Geo TV, Inzamam-ul-Haq, the former Pakistan captain, said: “This is the first time that a cricket team has been seriously targeted… Pakistan’s image will be hit and only time will tell how much damage has been done to Pakistan cricket. The World Cup too might be affected… no country would want to come now to Pakistan… I am worried where Pakistan will get a chance to play, not only in Pakistan but outside as well. This is all so sad.”

The Indian cricket board, which called off a scheduled tour of Pakistan last December, expressed its sorrow over the attack. “We pray for the speedy recovery of the injured cricketers, and sympathise with their families and compatriots,” BCCI Secretary N Srinivasan said in New Delhi. “The BCCI stands alongside Sri Lanka Cricket in this hour of crisis.”

The Sri Lankan team had stepped in after the Indian government had barred the Indian team from touring Pakistan after the terror attack in Mumbai.

Mahela, Thilan break world record in Karachi

Karachi, Feb 22 (IANS) Sri Lanka’s Mahela Jayawardene and Thilan Samaraweera Sunday broke the long-standing world record for the fourth wicket established by England Colin Cowdrey and Peter May against West Indies in 1957.

Jayawardene took a single of Shoaib Malik almost 30 minutes before tea on the second day of the first Test against Pakistan to take his partnership with Samaraweera pass 411.

It is now the highest fourth-wicket record in Test cricket surpassing the previous feat set by Cowdrey and May at Edgbaston. The Sri Lankan duo broke records like ninepins.

They also took Sri Lanka past the 600 mark which means its now the highest runs in an innings at the National Stadium in Karachi. The previous highest (599-7) was scored by Pakistan against India in 2006.

They also broke the highest partnership record for any wicket. The previous record was established by the duo of Javed Miandad and Qasim Umar who put on 397 for the third wicket at Faisalabad in 1985.

They also broke the record for the highest partnership for any wicket at the National Stadium which 298 between Aamer Sohail and Ijaz Ahmed against the West Indies in 1998.
Omar Khalid

Sri Lanka on way to massive first innings total

Karachi, Feb 22 (IANS) Pakistan took three quick wickets even as Sri Lanka extended their total to 614-6 at tea on the second day of the first cricket Test here at the National Stadium Sunday.

Shoaib Malik removed Mahela Jayawardene for 240 and then scalped Tillekaratne Dilshan for a duck while Danish Kaneria got rid of Thilan Smaraweera (231) to bring smile on the faces of the few spectators who turned up to watch their team’s first Test in 14 months.

The three wickets fell in the space of ten balls which is in contrast to what happened earlier in the day when Pakistan were unable to pick a single wicket for almost 56 overs.

Jayawardene completed his fifth double century off 354 balls with 27 fours. A few overs later, Samaraweera reached his first double ton in Test cricket off 287 balls with 31 boundaries.

The pair added 437 runs which is new world record for the fourth wicket, surpassing the feat achieved by England’s Colin Cowdrey and Peter May against West Indies in 1957.

Jayawardene was the first to go when he gloved one to wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal while going for a sweep. Seven balls later, Samaraweera was beaten by a Kaneria googly that went into the stumps after a thin edge off the bat.

Malik then returned to scalp Dilshan who edged one straight into the gloves of Akmal. Sri Lanka added 109 in the second session for the loss of three wickets.

Earlier, resuming their first innings at 406-3, Sri Lanka continued to score freely against a seemingly toothless Pakistan attack, adding another 99 runs in the first session off 30 overs to reach a healthy 505-3 at lunch.
Indo Asian News Service

Jayawardene, Samaraweera hit double tons against Pakistan

Karachi, Feb 22 (IANS) Mahela Jayawardene and Thilan Samaraweera hit double centuries each en route a record partnership as Sri Lanka consolidated their grip on the first cricket Test against Pakistan at the National Stadium here Sunday.

Jayawardene smashed 240, his fifth double-hundred, while Samaraweera scored a career-best 231 as Sri Lanka declared their first innings at 644-7 in 155.2 overs.

The tourists then got rid of the left-handed opener Salman Butt in the second last over of the day to leave Pakistan at 44-1 in 22 overs, still needing 401 more runs to avoid follow-on.

Veteran spinner Muttiah Muralitharan got rid of Butt when he was caught by Jayawerdene for 23 off 70 balls. Debutant opener Khurram Manzoor was unbeaten at 18 while captain Younis Khan was at the crease without opening his account. Pakistan, playing their first Test in 14 months, trail Sri Lanka by 600 runs.

The highlight of the day was a superb 437-run partnership between Jayawardene and Samaraweera that broke the previous highest stand for the fourth wicket (411) established by England’s Colin Cowdrey and Peter May against West Indies in 1957.

They also took Sri Lanka past the 600-run mark which is now the highest total in an innings at the National Stadium in Karachi. The previous highest (599-7) was scored by Pakistan against India in 2006.

They also broke the record for the highest partnership for any wicket at the National Stadium, the 298-run stand between Aamer Sohail and Ijaz Ahmed against the West Indies in 1998.

Pakistan struck back with three wickets in quick succession just before tea.

Malik removed Jayawardene and then scalped Tillekaratne Dilshan for a duck while Danish Kaneria got rid of Samaraweera.

The three wickets fell in the space of ten balls, which is in contrast to what happened earlier in the day when Pakistan were unable to pick a single wicket in almost 56 overs.

Jayawardene was the first to go when he gloved one to wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal while going for a sweep. Seven balls later, Samaraweera was bowled by Kaneria googly.

Malik then removed Dilshan, who edged one straight into the gloves of Akmal. Sri Lanka added 109 in the second session for the loss of three wickets.

Kaneria was the pick of Pakistani bowlers with 3-170 while Malik finished with 2-140.

Stanford Empire lost forever for England cricketers

London, Feb. 21 (ANI): England’s players became uncertain about their finances after hearing that the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) will not be associated with disgraced Texan tycoon Allan Stanford.

The ECB insists that the 18 first-class counties will not be out of pocket even though they were due for a handout from Stanford, The Sun reports.

The Board on Friday cut-off all contractual ties with Stanford after he was charged with serial fraud worth over six billion pounds.

Stanford’s Twenty20 for 20, which was due to run for another four years, has been scrapped. The ECB were due to rake in around 2.4 million pounds each year from the event.

The Twenty20 tournament involving England, Sri Lanka, New Zealand and Stanford’s team has also been axed. Prize money was worth around 6.2 million pounds.

“The ECB was shocked by the charges filed against the Stanford organization,” Chief Executive David Collier said.

“Given the uncertainty of the financial markets and sponsorship dispute between Digicel and the West Indies Board during Stanford matches, we took a contingency in case the matches did not proceed. So, there will be no impact on fee payments to counties in 2009,” he added.

Collier and ECB chairman Giles Clarke remain under fire, with Hampshire boss Rod Bransgrove describing their involvement with Stanford as “a tacky relationship with a tacky person”.

Leicestershire chairman Neil Davidson added: “I think they need to take a look at themselves.” (ANI)

Appeals in umpire decision review system reduced for Windies-England series

Dubai, Jan.29 (ANI): The International Cricket Council (ICC) has confirmed that the ongoing trial of the umpire decision review system will afford each side two unsuccessful reviews per innings rather than the three that have been available up to now.

An ICC media release said that the change to the playing conditions of the trial has been made after receiving initial feedback from players and match officials and will apply to the upcoming Test series between the West Indies and England.

If it proves to be a successful modification in the first two Tests of that series, it will also be introduced for the final series to be used in the trial, namely Australia’s tour to South Africa.

Both teams have approved the change.

Once those series are finished, a full appraisal of the trial will be undertaken and the issue of whether to continue with the review system or discard it will be debated at the ICC Cricket Committee in May.

“The umpire decision review system trial has so far received mostly positive feedback from players and officials but we want to get it right before we consider applying it to international cricket on a permanent basis,” said ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat.

“That is why we have made this refinement to it. It has become clear during the trial so far that three unsuccessful reviews per innings is too many as there is potential there for frivolous or unnecessary reviews to be made by one side or the other.

“This is all part of the trial process. We are testing different playing conditions so that we can find the best one and give the trial every chance of succeeding.

We listen to feedback and we have been hearing that two is a preferred option.”

With this change, the system will see the fielding and batting side allowed two unsuccessful appeals to the umpire per innings to change a decision if it is perceived to have been incorrect.

The rest of the playing conditions for this trial remain unchanged. The appeals can be made only by the batsman in receipt of the umpire’s original decision or the captain of the fielding side, in both cases by the player making a “T” sign with both forearms at shoulder height.

The on-field umpire will consult with the third umpire, who will review available television coverage of the incident before relaying fact-based information back to his colleague.

The on-field umpire will then deliver his decision either by raising his finger to indicate “out” or by crossing his hands in a horizontal position side to side in front and above his waist three times – as per a “safe” decision by an official in baseball.

If it is different to his original decision, the umpire will touch both shoulders, each with the opposition hand, to revoke the previous signal and then make a fresh signal as per the revised decision.

Commenting on the trial, ICC General Manager – Cricket David Richardson, a former Test and ODI player for South Africa, said: “Our Emirates Elite and International Panel umpires already ensure the vast majority of decisions made in any Test or ODI are correct but we want to see if we can enhance the game further by reducing or removing the few clearly incorrect ones.

“The fact that each side is now allowed only two unsuccessful requests to review in each innings should mean that players will not make frivolous challenges and, instead, only seek a referral to decisions that, it is quickly clear, are highly likely to be incorrect.

“By seeking to reduce these potentially contentious decisions we believe we can help remove a source of tension and frustration among players and spectators as well as any resultant pressure on umpires.

“At the same time we have sought to ensure the continued primacy of the on-field umpire. The man on the field’s role is to consult with his colleague, not to refer the decision away, and he still decides whether or not to change his original decision.

“Once the trial is over we will conduct a thorough review of the process before deciding whether the trial was successful and worth persevering with.”

The four-Test series between West Indies and England begins in Jamaica on 4 February while the South Africa v Australia series gets underway in Johannesburg on 26 February.(ANI)

Sri Lanka can jump over England and Pakistan in ODI rankings: ICC

Dubai, Jan.19 (ANI): Sri Lanka will move up two places to fifth in the Reliance Mobile ICC ODI Championship table if it beats Pakistan in all three ODIs coming up in Karachi and Lahore.

According to an ICC media release, Mahela Jayawardena’s team currently lies in seventh position following a tour of mixed results in Bangladesh. In a tri-series that also involved Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka lost one match to the home side but later exacted revenge in what was a thrilling and closely fought final.

The Sri Lankan cricket team is in Karachi for the first ODI that takes place on January 20, knowing that a 3-0 result in the series will ensure it leap-frogs both Shoaib Malik’s men and also sixth-placed England.

However, the reverse result would relegate Sri Lanka from its current tally of 105 ratings points to 102 which would still be significantly ahead of eighth-placed West Indies, which has 91 points to its name at present.

Victory for Pakistan in the series will ensure it keeps the pressure on India and a 3-0 win for Shoaib will put his team within one point of Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s side.

The Bangladesh v Zimbabwe series is underway today (19 January) in Dhaka with the visiting team hoping to move past Ireland into 10th place in the ODI Championship. To do this it needs to win the series 2-1 or 3-0 while a 1-2 defeat will still gain it one ratings point but that would not be enough to overtake the Irish.

Meanwhile, Australia’s Nathan Bracken has slipped below Daniel Vettori at the top of the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI bowlers after the first two ODIs against South Africa. Kyle Mills has received a similar boost as his captain meaning New Zealand can now boast two bowlers in the top three.

In the two games so far, Bracken has taken one wicket at an average of 87.00 and that was enough to let the Black Caps’ skipper back to top spot.

The two left-armed trans-Tasman rivals have been trading places for some weeks now and with three ODIs still remaining in the current series, not to mention five coming up between Australia and New Zealand next month, there is no sign of an end to that yo-yoing just yet.

Mills has benefited from the fact that Muttiah Muralidaran of Sri Lanka and Australia’s Mitchell Johnson have fallen back. Murali was not his usual dominant self in Bangladesh, taking four wickets in three matches, while Johnson was not in the Australia ODI squad for the first two matches of the South Africa series.

There is better news, however, for Murali’s spin partner Ajantha Mendis. The winner of Emerging Player of the Year 2008 at the LG ICC Awards has taken another leap and broken into the top 20 for the first time in his career.

His seven wickets, taken at an impressive average of 10.85, have gained him nine places in the rankings to joint-16th position, level with West Indies’ Daren Powell.

Of course, it was a competitive tri-series for host team Bangladesh as the home side beat Sri Lanka on one occasion and almost did so again in the final.

The main beneficiary of Bangladesh’s success was Shakib Al Hasan, who has broken into the top five in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI all-rounders. The 21-year-old scored 153 runs in the series at an average of 76.50 and a strike-rate of better than a run a ball while also managing to collect five wickets for 69 runs at an average of 13.80 and an economy-rate of just 2.65.

That effort has gained him three places in the all-rounders’ list, putting him above Jacques Kallis of South Africa and Pakistan’s Shoaib Malik but still behind Jacob Oram of New Zealand in first place and England’s Andrew Flintoff second. He has also moved up 10 places to 34th in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI batsmen.

Speaking of the batting rankings, Ricky Ponting has gained one place to sixth in the list while Kallis has gained three places to 13th spot. India’s Sachin Tendulkar is up one place to 11th position.

The news is not so good for Michael Hussey, who drops one place to fourth with Shivnarine Chanderpaul benefiting from his misfortune. Also, Protea Herschelle Gibbs has fallen three places to 18th position.

A notable big mover in the latest batting chart is Australia opener Shaun Marsh, whose innings of 79 and 78 in the first ODIs of the series have earned him 31 places and he now sits in 32nd position, nicely poised for further gains if his impressive form holds. (ANI)

Top performers named in provisional squads for ICC Women’s World Cup 2009

Dubai, Jan.13 (ANI): The best of the best in women’s cricket have been named in the provisional squads for the ICC Women’s World Cup 2009 to be held in Australia from 7 to 22 March.

In ICC events, participating teams are expected to submit their provisional squads 60 days prior to the start of the tournament while the teams are expected to name their final 15-player squads 30 days before the first match.

The top three ODI batters in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings – Claire Taylor of England, Australia’s Lisa Sthalekar and Mithali Raj of India – have all been named in the provisional squads along with leading bowlers Isa Guha of England, Shelley Nitschke of Australia and India’s Jhulan Goswami.

Also featuring are Karen Rolton of Australia, who won the ICC Women’s Cricketer of the Year in 2006, the 2008 winner England’s Charlotte Edwards, New Zealand’s Haidee Tiffin, Ashlyn Kilowan and Alicia Smith of South Africa, Sajida Shah of Pakistan and Dedunu Silva and Shashikala Siriwardena of Sri Lanka.

Australia and New Zealand will make final touches to their World Cup preparations by playing in the Rose Bowl Series in New Zealand from 1 to 12 February while Pakistan and Sri Lanka will warm up for the most prestigious event in women’s cricket by participating in the triangular series in Bangladesh from 3 to 18 February.

England, which submitted its 15-player squad in October, along with India, South Africa and the West Indies, has no ODIs planned in a lead up to the tournament.

The ICC Women’s World Cup 2009 will see the world’s top eight teams – hosts and holders Australia, along with England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka and the West Indies – compete at six venues across New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory (ACT).

ESPN STAR Sports, the ICC’s broadcast partner, will cover all seven matches that will take place at North Sydney Oval, including the final. This will ensure that the event will be the most widely viewed to date, with the coverage to be aired in more than 100 countries.

The format of the event sees the teams divided into two groups. Australia, New Zealand, the West Indies and South Africa are in Group A while India, England, Sri Lanka and Pakistan are in Group B.

The top three sides in each group go forward to the Super Six stage where each side then plays the teams which have qualified from the other group. The top two sides from the Super Six go forward to the final.

The provisional squads for all eight participating teams are:

AUSTRALIA – Karen Rolton (captain) Sarah Andrews, Alex Blackwell, Kate Blackwell, Melissa Bulow, Kris Britt, Jessica Cameron, Renee Chappell, Leonie Coleman, Lauren Ebsary, Sarah Edwards, Rene Farrell, Jodie Fields, Corrinne Hall, Rachel Haynes, Alyssa Healy, Jessica Jonassen, Delissa Kimmence, Shelley Nitschke, Erin Osborne, Ellyse Perry, Kirsten Pike, Leah Poulton, Emma Sampson, Clea Smith, Lisa Sthalekar, Selina Tainton, Jo-Ann Verrall, Elyse Villani, Julie Woerner.

ENGLAND – Charlotte Edwards (captain), Caroline Atkins, Katherine Brunt, Holly Colvin, Lydia Greenway, Lauren Griffiths, Isa Guha, Jenny Gunn, Laura Marsh, Beth Morgan, Ebony-Jewel Rainford-Brent, Nicola Shaw, Anya Shrubsole, Claire Taylor, Sarah Taylor.

INDIA – Amita Sharma, Anagha Deshpande, Anjum Chopra, Asha Rawat, Devika Palshikar, Diana David, Gouhar Sultana, Harmanpreet Kaur, Jaya Sharma, Jhulan Goswami, Lalita Sharma, Latika Kumari, Mithali Raj, Murugesan Thirushkamini, Niranjana Sankaramani, Nooshin Al-Khadeer, Pallavi Bharadwaj, Priti Dimri, Priyanka Roy, Punam Raut, Ria Chaudhury, Rumeli Dhar, Reema Malhotra, Rajeshwari Goyal, Seema Pujare, Sindhu Basu, Snehal Pradhan, Sravanthi Krishnamurthy, Sulakshana Naik, Swarupa Kadam.

NEW ZEALAND – Haidee Tiffin (captain), Suzie Bates, Kate Broadmore, Nicola Browne, Sarah Burke, Abby Burrows, Emma Campbell, Rachel Candy, Amanda Cooper, Sophie Devine, Anna Dodd, Luch Doolan, Maria Fahey, Rosamond Kember, Victoria Lind, Frances Mackay, Katey Martin, Aimee Mason, Sara McGlashan, Beth McNeill, Louise Milliken, Prashilla Mistry, Rowan Milburn, Rachel Priest, Katherine Pulford, Sian Ruck, Amy Satterthwaite, Sarah Tsukigawa, Megan Wakefield, Anna Wilkins.

PAKISTAN – Almas Akram, Asmavia Iqbal, Armaan Khan, Bibi Nahida, Bismah Maroof, Javeria Wadood, Kainat Imtiaz, Mariam Hassan Shah, Marina Iqbal, Mehwish Tariq, Naila Nazir, Nazia Sadiq, Nida Rashid, Sabeen, Sajida Shah, Salma Faiz, Sana Gulzar, Sana Mir, Sana Zeeshan, Sania Iqbal, Sukhan Faiz, Sumaiya Siddiqui, Syeda Nain Abidi, Sadia Yousaf, Syeda Batool Fatima Naqvi, Sumaira Sajid, Qanita Jalil, Urooj Mumtaz, Wajiha Sundas, Zeba Hussain.

SOUTH AFRICA – Olivia Anderson, Susan Benade, Cri-Zelda Brits, Trisha Chetty, Moseline Daniels, Denisha Devnarain, Shandre Fritz, Alison Hodgkinson, Shabnim Ismail, Marizanne Kapp, Ashlyn Kilowan, Marcia Letsoalo, Sunette Loubser, Dane van Niekerk, Mignon Du Preez, Alicia Smith, Melissa Smook, Claire Terblanche, Daleen Terblanche, Kirstie Thomson, Charlize van der Westhuizen, Yolandi van der Westhuizen.

SRI LANKA – Sanduni Abeyawickrama, Suwini de Alwis, Chamari Atapaththu, Chamika Bandara, Dushyanthi Dedunu, Sandamali Dolawatta, Shereena Faizer, Hiruka Fernando, Rose Fernando, Sumudu Fernando, Sajeewani Galagedara, Chandima Gunerathna, Gayathri Kariyawasam, Nirosha Kumari, Eshani Lokusooriya, Ama Kanchana, Lasanthi Madushani, Dilani Manodara, Chamari Polgampola, Udeshika Prabodini, Deepika Rasangika, Dumila Ramma Waduge, Maduri Samudika, Chamani Seneviratne, Dedunu de Silva, Shashikala Siriwardena, Prabha Udawatta, Prasadini Weerakkodi, Sripali Weerakkodi, Chandi Wickremasinghe.

WEST INDIES – Merissa Aguilleira, Kirbyina Alexander, Melisia Billingy, Shemaine Campbelle, Phernel Charles, Maria David, Shanel Daley, Deandra Dottin, Keila Elliott, Pearl Etienne, Afy Fletcher, Erva Giddings, Geneille Greaves, Cordel Jack, Stacy-Ann King, Pamela Lavine, Debbie-Ann Lewis, Tracey Miller, Anisa Mohammed, Chedean Nation, Juliana Nero, Gaitri Seetahal, Shakera Selman, Zaheeda Samdally, Nicole Samuel, Danielle Small, Charlene Taitt, Stefanie Taylor, Joann Vansertima, Vanessa Watts.(ANI)

Warne warns opponents to be wary of dangerous backlash from wounded Pietersen

Melbourne, Jan 9 (ANI): Kevin Pietersen’s good friend and former Hampshire teammate Shane Warne has warned that Pietersen would be an even more dangerous and committed player now that he has relinquished the England captaincy.

Pietersen resigned from his leadership duties on Wednesday after a bitter feud with coach Peter Moores, who was sacked soon after Pietersen quit.

As Pietersen prepares to head to the West Indies as a rank-and-file player under new skipper Andrew Strauss, Warne said his controversial mate would become an even more threatening cricket animal.

“Kevin is a guy who likes the limelight, he likes to be the man. He’s obviously got a pretty big ego as well, so that will be dented a bit. But he’s also got the ability, no matter what’s going on, to perform,” Warne said.

“One thing is for sure. England needs Kevin Pietersen. He’s their best player and one of the best players in the world and England needs him to perform.

“This situation will stir his emotions. He’ll be bitterly disappointed at the lack of support from the England Cricket Board and I”m sure this will drive him to become an even stronger player. Come the Ashes, beware of Kevin Pietersen because he could lift his game to another level,” he said.

Warne said that on a personal note he wished the situation had never occurred.

“As a friend of Kevin, I’m disappointed he’s no longer captain of England. The thing with him he was only going to improve as he went, like every captain does.” (ANI)

Strauss believes his troubled team has time to be ready for Ashes

Sydney, Jan 9 (ANI): England’s new cricket captain Andrew Strauss believes that his troubled team has time to heal before taking on Australia in the Ashes.

Strauss vowed to restore unity in the squad following Kevin Pietersen’s dramatic resignation as skipper and the sacking of coach Peter Moores on Wednesday due to a rift between the two.

“Its important to realise the Ashes is still quite a long way away. There’s time for things to heal, for England to get back to playing the kind of cricket we know we need to play to beat Australia,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Strauss, as saying.

The England players fly out for a tour of the West Indies on January 21 and opening batsman Strauss said the trip would be an important first step in the team’s bonding.

“I think I am right person to do the job. We are about playing and winning cricket matches, I”m sure that will unite us,” he said.

Strauss did not believe that the conflict had divided the England dressing room as much as some reports suggested.

“I don’t think the rifts are nearly as bad as people have made them out to be and England cricketers want to go out and play good cricket,” he said.

Strauss also revealed he had spoken to Pietersen after being approached to take over the captaincy and explained his reasons for accepting.

“KP has been very supportive of me so far. I fully believe that in everything Kevin did as England captain that he acted solely in what he felt was in the best interests of the team.

“I know Kevin extremely well and appreciate he may be bruised at the moment but he will bounce back and will be one of the most important figures going forward,” he added. (ANI)

Vettori reclaims top spot in ICC rankings for ODI bowlers

Dubai, Jan 9 (ANI): New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori has made a superb start to 2009 by becoming the number-one ranked ODI bowler in the world again.

The left-arm spinner, who turns 30 later this month, has taken six wickets in the first three matches of the current series against the West Indies at an impressive average of just 12.33 and a thrifty economy rate of 3.08.

In the process he has moved above Australia’s Nathan Bracken into top spot in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI bowlers.

It is not the first time Vettori has been at the summit, having spent much of the first half of last year in first position. But Bracken toppled him in June 2008, coincidentally also while playing against the West Indies, but now the 31-year-old New South Welshman has been consigned to second spot once again.

Nevertheless, Bracken has the perfect opportunity to retake number-one place having been named in Australia’s one-day squad for the upcoming five-ODI series against South Africa.

Things are continuing to go well for Vettori’s team-mate Kyle Mills as his four wickets claimed in the series so far have earned him another place and put him in fourth, just ahead of Mitchell Johnson of Australia.

West Indies fast bowler Daren Powell has managed to move up two places to 17th position in the bowling rankings following a good start to the ODI series in New Zealand for him.

The big mover is young Black Cap Tim Southee who has managed to gain 20 places to put him in 75th position.

Another top-class player who has not fired on all cylinders during this series to date is West Indies talisman Chris Gayle. The hard-hitting left-hander has lost one place in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI batsmen and has dropped out of the top five, into sixth position.

His place has been taken by India’s Yuvraj Singh, who returns to the top five after a brief spell occupying sixth place. Top spot is still reserved for Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who is closely followed by Michael Hussey of Australia in second place and Proteas’ captain Graeme Smith in third. (ANI)

Pietersen arrives back in the UK

London, Jan.8 (ANI): Ex-England cricket captain Kevin Pietersen has arrived back home following a winter holiday in South Africa.

Greeted by photographers and reporters, Pietersen refused to make a comment on the current crisis in England cricket, and was escorted to a waiting car by police.

Pietersen quit as England skipper after only five months on Wednesday in the wake of his rift with coach Peter Moores – who was sacked.

Wednesday”s tumultuous events leave England in disarray ahead of the tour to the West Indies and the Ashes series against Australia this summer.

England leave for the Caribbean on January 21, and the England and Wales Cricket Board will now begin its search for a new coach.

Andrew Strauss has been named as captain for the tour of the West Indies, although it is not known whether he will also take charge of the one-day and Twenty20 teams.

The ECB have announced a news conference for 3 p.m. GMT at Lord”s, where Strauss and Hugh Morris, the ECB”s managing director, will address the media.

Pietersen, who admitted last week his relationship with Moores was strained, has stated his desire to remain involved in the England set-up.

And former skipper Michael Vaughan, whose potential return to the England team led to a clash between Pietersen and Moores, has backed Pietersen to put the controversy behind him.

“What Kevin has to do now is go to the West Indies and score a hundred in the first Test, then it will be forgotten,” Vaughan .

Past skippers and players said that Pietersen got what he justily deserved after bringing his conflict with Moores into the public domain. (ANI)

Forgotten Phil Jaques declares he is ready to tour S.Africa

Sydney, Jan.8 (ANI): Forgotten Australian opener Phil Jaques has declared that he is available to return for next month”s tour of South Africa.

With Hayden showing no signs of retirement, Jaques, 29, declared his availability for the crunch tour as he tries to return from back surgery on a bulging disc.

According to the Daily Telegraph, the left-hander thinks he has the runs on the board after scoring 108 in his last Test against the West Indies in Barbados last year.

He will play club cricket next week and then return to the first-class scene when NSW play Tasmania in Newcastle on January 30.

If his back shows no signs of more problems, Jaques appears a must-have selection for South Africa after averaging 47 in his 11 Tests.

“I scored 100 in my last Test so hopefully they remember that,” Jaques told The Daily Telegraph yesterday. “I think I”ve got the runs on the board.

Australia will name the one-day and Twenty20 squads today and Hayden surely must exit for younger men. (ANI)

Andrew Strauss’ unenviable task of healing England’s rifts and improving results

London, Jan 8 (ANI): England’s new cricket captain Andrew Strauss has tough tasks on hand of getting his teammates united in the present scenario and make the team perform as it has scored victories only against lower-ranked opponents in the last 18 months.

Strauss has two immediate tasks on the tour to the West Indies that starts on January 21, outside of improving results, and both are interwoven: To reintegrate Pietersen into the team after what has been a massive blow to his ego, and to heal the dressing-room divisions, The Times reported.

Before making his recommendations to the board, Managing Director of England cricket Hugh Morris canvassed opinion among the players, and while he found universal admiration for Pietersen’s greatness as a player, such sentiments did not extend to his personality or leadership, the paper said.

It is no secret that Andrew Flintoff does not like Pietersen. Flintoff, although no longer harbouring leadership ambitions, carries a good number of players along with him, while Strauss has been known to query if not Pietersen’s actions, then certainly his motives.

So when Pietersen flexed his muscles by effectively demanding coach Peter Moores’s removal, there was little support.

Strauss now has the unenviable task of trying to harness his two biggest names and two biggest match-winners for the benefit of the team. If he does not do that, his tenure, like Pietersen’s, will be a short one, the paper said.

This, according to the report, will not be easy, now that Pietersen has been made aware that he did not carry the dressing room as he thought he did. And now that everyone else knows this, too, this is a very public humiliation for him.

Pietersen will feel diminished next time he walks into the dressing-room and he will also feel personally let down by the likes of Flintoff and Stephen Harmison, players he made a great show of showering praise on when he accepted the job. When an ego as big as Pietersen’s is punctured in such a spectacular way, who knows what the consequences?

Yesterday, Strauss was given two pieces of good news in his quest to bring some ballast to this listing ship. First, Pietersen reaffirmed in the strongest possible terms, according to ECB sources, his desire to represent England in all forms of the game. Pietersen needs the kudos that international cricket brings and he is smart enough to know that without it, his value would quickly shrink.

Second, Strauss has a much better chance of getting Pietersen onside now that Moores has been relieved of his duties.

The departure, then, of Moores and Pietersen from positions of responsibility could strengthen England in the medium term, the report concludes. (ANI)

Windies batsman Pollard receives reprimand for ICC Code of Conduct breach

Wellington (New Zealand), Jan.7 (ANI): West Indies batsman Kieron Pollard has been officially reprimanded for breaching the ICC Code of Conduct during his side’s third ODI against New Zealand at Wellington.

At a hearing that took place after the match on Wednesday, Javagal Srinath of the Emirates Elite Panel of ICC Match Referees found Pollard guilty of causing damage to a dressing room.

The 21-year-old was found to have breached Level 1.2 of the code which relates to “abuse of cricket equipment or clothing, group equipment of fixtures and fittings”.

After giving his decision, Mr Srinath said: “Pollard damaged the door glass in the dressing room with his bat after he returned to the pavilion after being given out lbw by umpire Mark Benson in the 22nd over of the innings. That is inappropriate behaviour and clearly unacceptable as the players are expected to accept and respect the umpires’ decision.

“The player pleaded guilty to the charge and apologised for his actions to New Zealand Cricket. This apology and the fact he is relatively early in his career were taken into consideration,” he added.

According to an ICC media release, all Level 1 breaches carry a minimum penalty of an official reprimand and a maximum penalty of a fine equivalent to 50 per cent of a player’s match fee. For all Level 1 breaches, the match referee’s decision is final and binding.

The incident was brought to the attention of the match referee by both New Zealand Cricket’s cricket administrative manager Tim Murdoch and the West Indies cricket manager Omar Khan.

Srinath reached his decision after a hearing attended by the player, Omar Khan and Murdoch.(ANI)

Malik ready to guide team to top of cricket rankings

Lahore, Jan 7 (ANI): Pakistan cricket captain Shoaib Malik has said that he is ready to take the national team to the top of the cricket rankings after his tenure as skipper was renewed for an indefinite period.

The Pakistan Cricket Board last week opted to keep 26-year-old Malik on as captain for the foreseeable future, with PCB chairman Ijaz Butt saying there was “no reason to replace him” when his tenure expired on December 31.

The News quoted Malik as saying that the move had motivated him to take Pakistan to new heights.

“Ever since I took over the team, my aim has been for us to fight and play as a unit, so that remains the prime target, and I aim to take Pakistan to the top place in the world,” Malik said.

“I am thankful to the PCB, the PCB chairman for showing faith and confidence in me. I will always try my level best to keep the team on the winning track.”

Malik was appointed captain after Pakistan’s humiliating first-round exit from the World Cup held in the West Indies in 2007.

Since then, he has led Pakistan in only three Tests, losing two and drawing one. Pakistan did not play a single Test in 2008 after Australia postponed their tour over security fears.

Malik has led Pakistan in 33 One-day Internationals, winning 23 and losing 10.

He led Pakistan to a 3-0 win over the West Indies in their neutral venue series in Abu Dhabi in November last year — a victory that helped convince the sport’s governors to extend his captaincy.

Malik’s next assignment will be a home series with Sri Lanka who agreed to tour Pakistan after India pulled out of a planned trip in January-February this year. (ANI)

Australia clings on to first place after win in Sydney

Dubai, Jan.7 (ANI): Australia has survived at the top of the Reliance Mobile ICC Test Championship table following its 103-run victory over South Africa in the third and final match of the series in Sydney.

But the pressure is still on Ricky Ponting’s team as the gap at the top has been closed to just five ratings points following the historic 2-1 series defeat.

It is the first time South Africa has won a Test series in Australia and it sets up a fascinating return series, the first Test of which gets underway on 26 February in Johannesburg. Any sort of victory in that three-match series will see the Proteas go top of the rankings.

As it was victory for Graeme Smith and his men in Sydney would have been enough to put them top but Australia dug deep in the final match of the series to keep the chasing pack at bay.

With India very much in the ascendency there are now just eight points separating first place from third with all three teams very much in contention for the right to be called the number-one Test side in the world.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka strengthened its hold on fourth place in the rankings following its 2-0 series win in Bangladesh.

After it had been pushed very hard in the first Test in Dhaka, Mahela Jayawardena’s team proved far too strong the second time around and finally ran out winners by 465 runs in Chittagong.

That win gave Sri Lanka another ratings point to put it within 10 of India and six ahead of England, which recently lost an away series 1-0 to India.

Pakistan is another three points further back in sixth place while the West Indies is still just ahead of New Zealand by a fraction of a point following the recent drawn series in the Land of the Long White Cloud.

Reliance Mobile ICC Test Championship (as of 7 January)

Rank Team Rating

1 Australia 126

2 South Africa 121

3 India 118

4 Sri Lanka 109

5 England 103

6 Pakistan 100

7 West Indies 81

8 New Zealand 81

9 Bangladesh 0

(ANI)

Harmison urges Moores and Pietersen to resolve differences

London, Jan.6 (ANI): England fast bowler Stephen Harmison has said that he would like coach Peter Moores and skipper Kevin Pietersen to resolve their differences sooner than later, as that will be good for the England team.

Moores, the head coach, and Pietersen, the captain, are set for crisis talks this week with Moores”s job understood to be on the line.

“They have got to get their heads together and have a chat and sort out the issues,” The Independent quoted Harmison, as saying.

“It”s about the England cricket team – not Peter Moores or Kevin Pietersen. It”s not ideal because we are at the start of an Ashes summer, but we don”t want it to go on and on with what we”ve got coming over the next nine months. They have got to be in harmony because otherwise they will drift the team farther apart. If there is a problem, it needs to be sorted sooner rather than later,” he added.

An announcement on the future of Moores is expected this week and Hugh Morris, the England managing director, is talking through the options with David Collier, the ECB chief executive.

The ECB board must ratify any decision. The 12 members may be summoned for an emergency sitting or special conference call, with the next scheduled meeting as distant as January 21, which also happens to be the date of England”s departure for the tour to the West Indies.

If Moores does lose his job, he may rue his failure to play the political game, according to the man who succeeded him at Sussex.

Mark Robinson, who took charge as cricket manager at Hove in 2005 when Moores left to run the ECB”s National Academy, believes that his friend and one-time colleague could still work with Pietersen.

Robinson, who has exchanged e-mails with Moores since news broke of the divide at the heart of the national team, said: “I know that all Pete cares about is what is best for the team, he just wants people to go out there all together and win. Everything he does is with the team in mind. He has no ego.

Ray Illingworth, whose experience includes spells as England coach, captain and chairman of selectors, fears for Moores. “The captain has to be the main person,”

Illingworth said. “It is a clash of personalities and someone has to make a decision as to which one goes.”

David Lloyd, who followed Illingworth as coach in 1997, offered an old-fashioned solution.

“They need to be taken into a dark room and told to sort it out. I”m struggling to understand Pietersen”s problem with Moores in the first place,” he said.

Lloyd suggested that Moores, if forced out, might be interested in the job as Lancashire first-team coach, which became available when Mike Watkinson was moved into a new role as director of cricket.

Moores, who lives in the East Midlands, was born and raised in nearby Macclesfield. (ANI)

Robinson Crusoe’s saviour’s 300-year-old journal discovered

London, Jan 6 (ANI): A 300-year-old journal of a British explorer who defeated pirates of the Caribbean and rescued real-life Robinson Crusoe has been unearthed and is expected to fetch 3,000 pounds at an auction.

It will go under the hammer on January 21.

The swashbuckling privateer Capt Woodes Rogers, who left the English shore in 1708, left a very rare account in records of his three-year, round-the-world voyage. He made his fortune by raiding pirate ships, reports the Telegraph.

Rogers made a fortune pillaging from pirate ships and Spanish galleons.

While on that journey, Rogers, who was a friend of the author Daniel Defoe, even stopped off at a remote Pacific island and found castaway Alexander Selkirk, who inspired the character and book Robinson Crusoe.

He said he found him “wild-looking” and wearing “goatskins”, adding: “He had with him his clothes and bedding, with a firelock, some powder, bullets and tobacco, a hatchet, a knife, a kettle, a Bible and books.”

Commanding two 36-gun ships, the Duke and the Duchess, and 333 men, he sailed the South Seas, the East Indies and the Cape of Good Hope, going about his task with great gusto.

His catches include the prized vessel The Great Manila, a Spanish trading ship that sailed across the Pacific with a valuable cargo, including precious stones and exotic silks worth 2 million dollars.

He was appointed the governor of the Behamas by King George I in 1717, and played a major role in ridding the islands of 2,000 pirates, including Edward Teach, also called Blackbeard. He was pursued by Rogers” forces and killed.

It is believed that only a hundred copies of his book, A Cruising Voyage Around the World, were printed seven years after Rogers completed his odyssey. One was recently found in a loft in Bristol, where Rogers” was based. (ANI)