Despair turns to triumph for Shahadat

Five years ago Shahadat Hossain left London convinced that Bangladesh’s first test at Lord’s was going to be his last.

Eighteen-year-old Shahadat conceded 101 runs from 12 overs without taking a wicket as Bangladesh tumbled to an innings and 261 runs defeat within three days.

“It was a nightmare debut,” Shahadat recalled on Friday after he became the first Bangladesh player to earn a place on the Lord’s honours board with five for 98 on the second day of the first test.

“I never thought I would get a second chance to come to Lord’s. I was dropped from the national team and selected for the A (second) team and came to England where I became the highest wicket taker.

“I was called back into the national squad and I thought if I had the second chance to play at Lord’s I would make amends for that.”

On Friday Shahadat more than compensated for his miserable 2005 outing against a powerful England side who went on to regain the Ashes from Australia in an unforgettable summer.

After dismissing Alastair Cook early on Thursday, he took four wickets, including three from 21 balls, to wrap up the England innings for 505 and troubled all the batsmen with some late movement on a pitch offering little to the bowlers.

Bangladesh’s top order took over where Shahadat had left off, reaching 172 for two at the close. Rain is forecast for the start of a British holiday weekend and it is now England who will be rethinking their strategies after dominating the first day.

Steven Finn, playing his first test at the headquarters of his county side Middlesex, was the best of an unthreatening England pace attack.

He startled Imrul Kayes (43) with a rising delivery which the batsmen fended to Andrew Strauss at first slip and maintained good control from a relaxed, high action which suggested he had pace in reserve.

“It’s been a bit of a slow wicket but with a bit more sun there could be a bit of variable bounce,” Finn told reporters.

Finn, who the England management believe might be a key players in the Ashes series in Australia this year with his pace and bounce, said the match could turn into a battle of attrition.

“They are a team who are improving game by game,” he said. “They have players who are dangerous and it’s important that we don’t take them lightly.”

(Editing by Pritha Sarkar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Raina promises a field day

To say that being in-charge of the Indian team is one of the most daunting propositions in world cricket may not quite seem like overstating the fact. Of the many responsibilities an Indian cricket captain is faced with, it is often the relentless and hard-to-please media back home, which proves to be a stiffer and unforgiving challenge than any opposition he comes across on the field.

At least, Suresh Raina, who will become the 20 th ODI captain for India-and the first from Uttar Pradesh- in Zimbabwe, passed his first test satisfactorily, displaying a calm exterior during his first-ever pre-tour press conference in Mumbai on Tuesday evening.

When asked-on a number of occasions-if regular Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni-who also leads Chennai Super Kings, the IPL franchise that Raina represents-had passed down any tips, the 24-year-old left-hander only revealed that he was asked to keep things simple. And while it remains to be seen whether Raina does heed his skipper’s advice when it comes to the action in Zimbabwe or not, he did stick to it during the press-briefing by keeping his responses ‘simple’ and cliched.

“It is a great opportunity, and I am looking forward to the challenge,” got reiterated by Raina at least four times the number of international games that his young pace-attack has managed between them for India.

And his opinions remained the same regarding both his personal goals as well as that of his young team.

Getting the opportunity at such a young age though did come as a pleasant surprise, believed Raina, and he expected his team to live up to their billing of the second-best ODI team in the world. “It was always a dream but it is a great responsibility. The seniors don’t often take breaks from the game and now that they have, it is up to the bench-strength to rise and do well. A good performance here will go a long way in enhancing their future opportunities,” he explained.

While almost the entire Indian team faced the wrath of the media following their disappointing exit from the World T20, Raina was the only one left unscathed. After all he was the only Indian batsman to have totaled three-figures in the tournament, finishing with over 200 runs, including a century against South Africa. He believed that it was up to the likes of Rohit Sharma, Yusuf Pathan, Murali Vijay and Virat Kohli to rise to the occasion and make the most of the seniors’ absence.

“They have all scored a lot of runs in the IPL and in domestic cricket but the onus is on them to replicate that form for India now,” said Raina.

Of the many criticisms that were stacked against the Indian team, it was their poor fielding that came under the scanner the most. But Raina believed his young team would prove a more athletic unit in the field. “We will run harder and are fitter. And if we score a total of 240-250, we will make it look like a 280+ target with our fielding,” said the new Indian captain. With conditions expected to assist fast bowling, Raina believed his team’s strength would be his pace-bowling department led by the inexperienced lot of Umesh Yadav, Vinay Kumar, Pankaj Singh and Ashok Dinda. “We have bowlers like Umesh who have pace and can trouble the opposition batsmen in those conditions,” he said.

Unlike Dhoni or most of his predecessors, Raina at least signed off on an optimistic note rather than sticking to a well-rehearsed diplomatic tone, insisting that there were no weaknesses in his side and that returning with the trophy was his sole objective as an Indian captain.

Waqar says fully fit pace attack critical for Test series against England and Australia

Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): Pakistan cricket coach Waqar Younis believes that a fully fit pace attack would the key during the Test series against England and Australia this summer.

Waqar told PakPassion.net that once the team returns from the Caribbean after the ICC World T20 Championship, the selectors would review options for the tough English tour, adding that he would like them to pick a few extra fast bowlers in particular to cope with any injury related trouble during the Test series.

He also expressed the hope that both fast bowler Umar Gul and all rounder Yasir Aarafat would get fit on time for the ‘home’ series in England.

“We need a lot of boys to be playing, we may bring a couple extra. We’ve got a long tour this summer. We have given Umar Gul and Yasir Arafat a rest. We need all those fast bowlers for the English conditions,” Waqar said.

When asked about the chances of young fast bowler Mohammed Irfan’s inclusion in the national squad, he said Irfan has got all the ingredients of becoming a world-class pacer.

“He is totally unorthodox, he”s tall, he’s got potential”. “I thought he might be good for the World T20 competition but unfortunately he couldn”t get into the side. I believe in the very near future he could get into the side,” Waqar said.

(ANI)

S. Africa’s Smith says only England ”can challenge” Australia in T20

St. Lucia (West Indies), May 12 (ANI): South Africa’s cricket skipper Graeme Smith has said that only England can stop Australia from winning the World Twenty20 in Barbados on Sunday.

Smith”s side were knocked out of the tournament after their loss to Pakistan on Monday in St Lucia and the big left-hander had no doubts about which teams were the main chances to claim the T20 world title.

“It”s about having good players with confidence who really believe and know their game very well and know their strengths,” Smith said.

“Australia probably at the moment are playing the most dominant cricket. They have really beaten teams comprehensively throughout this tournament. Having played against England, they played positive cricket against us,” Smith said.

“If they can maintain that level of play then I think they are probably the one team left that can challenge Australia”s pace attack,” he added.

England topped Group E in the Super Eights with three wins en route to Thursday”s semi-final against the second team in Group F (0130 AEST Friday).

Australia has topped Group F overnight, avoiding a semi-final clash with England on Friday. (ANI)

Clarke maturing into a fine captain: Warne

Brisbane, May 12 (ANI): Former Australian spinner Shane Warne believes Michael Clarke is turning out to be a fine captain.

””At the moment he is captain of the Twenty20 side and he is a doing bloody good job,”” Warne said in Brisbane, where he was coaching the nation”s developing spinners at the Centre of Excellence.

””I think they are playing a good brand of cricket. I think what you are seeing is him maturing – he is becoming a good leader and good player,”” he added.

””Australia probably at the moment are playing the most dominant cricket. They have really beaten teams comprehensively throughout this (World Twenty20) tournament,”” he said.

””Having played against England, they played positive cricket against us. If they can maintain that level of play then I think they are probably the one team left that can challenge Australia”s pace attack,”” he added.

Clarke is one of the world”s finest batsmen at Test and one-day international level but his batting performances in Twenty20, leading into the Super Eights match against the West Indies staged early this morning (Melbourne time), do not alone command a place in the side.

Before this morning”s match in St Lucia, he had made 32 runs at 10.66 during the ICC World Twenty20, with a career average of 22.18.

He is also one of Australia”s least experienced players in the shortest form of the game, having opted out of the Indian Premier League and has not played in the domestic Big Bash because of international commitments. (ANI)

Australia send message by overpowering India

Australia crushed India by 49 runs on Friday in the strongest sign yet that they have got to grips with the special demands of Twenty20 cricket.

Australia’s opening pair of David Warner (72 from 42 balls) and Shane Watson (54 from 32) hammered India’s bowling attack, their 104 run partnership setting up a total 184 for five in their Super Eight game at a sun-drenched Kensington Oval.

Michael Clarke’s side struck more than half of their runs from sixes — smashing 16 in total — before the Australian pace attack, relishing the fast and bouncy track, ripped through the Indian top order.

Dirk Nannes and Shaun Tait, who took three wickets each, generated some real speed as Australia reduced India to 50 for seven after 10.3 overs.

Although Rohit Sharma struck a magnificently entertaining unbeaten 79, including six sixes, it was an innings that only served to add respectability to the magnitude of India’s defeat.

It was a display from Australia, with some outstanding fielding to compliment the endeavours with bat and ball, that will make them, for many, favourites for the title in the Caribbean.

“I think our performance was really good today, if we continue to make totals like that, with our bowling and the way that we are fielding, it is going to be hard for opposition teams to beat us,” said skipper Clarke.

The damage was done early by Warner and Watson who meted out particular punishment to Indian slow left-armer Ravinda Jadeja.

Jadeja was hit for three sixes in a row by Watson at the end of his first over. When he was brought back Warner promptly hammered him for three consecutive sixes.

Jadeja’s misery was partially self-inflicted — he had dropped Watson when the Australian opener was on just seven.

David Hussey made 35 but after Australia were 150 in 15.2 overs they will be disappointed not to have become the first team to break the 200 barrier at this tournament.

India though were simply blitzed by short pitched pace bowling on a responsive surface that exposed an old weakness of Indian batsmen against the rising delivery.

Rather than try to battle their way through the difficult spells of pace, the Indians tried to go on the attack with miserable results.

“The adrenalin sometimes get the better of you. You try to fight fire with fire and it doesn’t always work and this was an example of that,” said skipper MS Dhoni.

“If somebody bowls 150kph short stuff then you have to be really good at pulling which isn’t our natural strength.

“Maybe we could have played through the first few overs because we saw as the ball got a bit older it didn’t come on as quickly.

Gambhir says India’s vaunted spinners won’t suffer against Australia

Barbados (West Indies), May 7 (ANI): Opening batsman Gautam Gambhir has rubbished claims that India’s spin-heavy attack will suffer a murderous assault at the hands of Australia’s batsmen on the pace-friendly Kensington Oval pitch during their Super Eights clash on Friday.

””We cannot plan for what the opposition has strategised for us, we will go with our own strengths,”” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Gambhir, as saying.

””We have a good-quality set of bowlers who can dismiss the opposition. We also have a set of spinners who are really good. I personally think that a quality spinner is an asset and the quality will show irrespective of what the surface is. Our bowling unit has performed well. Zaheer [Khan], Harbhajan [Singh] and Ashish [Nehra] have done really well. They look to dismiss the opposition,” he added.

Australian captain Michael Clarke talked up the strength of his side”s pace attack.

””I think these conditions are really going to help our fast bowlers; there was a lot of pace and bounce in that wicket,”” Clarke said after Dirk Nannes took 4-18 and Shaun Tait 1-15 against Bangladesh.

””Our fast bowlers will bowl as much short stuff as they like. We [the batsmen] cop it in the nets so we”ll definitely see it in the game. We”ve got some pace up our sleeve and I”m sure in these conditions we”ll be able to use it,”” Clarke added.

Australia are grouped with the three nations that orchestrated their exits from previous World Twenty20s: India, Sri Lanka and the West Indies.

””Australia haven”t done well in the T20s,”” Gambhir said.

””The first time they lost in the semis and the next year they did not qualify, so you can expect Australia to come back really strong. They have got some quality players in their side who can change the course of the match,”” he added. (ANI)

Lee dreams of forming ‘fearsome foursome’ pace attack for T20 World Cup

Sydney, Apr 27(ANI): Australian fast bowler Brett Lee believes he can form part of a fearsome four-man pace attack for the first game against defending Twenty20 World Cup champion Pakistan on Sunday.

“I’m not here to carry the drinks, I’m here to play cricket. We’ve got four guys who can bowl over 150 [km/h], which is a bit like the 1980s West Indies set-up,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Lee, as saying.

“We’re hoping to use that to our advantage. Even being stopped in the street now, hearing the locals saying that you’ve got four blokes who can bowl over 150 clicks. The word’s travelling about ‘look at this cartel of fast bowlers’,” he added.

Lee will be hoping to make his international comeback after being sidelined for six months due to an elbow injury.

He was earlier part of the Indian premier League (IPL), but he went wicketless in the tournament and conceded 149 runs in 14.3 overs.

“I was happy with the way the pace was coming through [in the IPL],” he said.

However, his dreams may be shattered as the turning St Lucian pitch is expected to offer minimal assistance to fast bowlers, while spinners Nathan Hauritz and Steven Smith will be strongly considered for the opener. (ANI)

Kiwis punt on teen for second Test

New Zealand is preparing to throw teenager Kane Williamson into battle against Australia’s pace attack on Saturday in a desperate bid to square the two-match Test series.

The Kiwis were thrashed by 10 wickets on day five of the first Test in Wellington with Doug Bollinger and debutant Ryan Harris taking 13 wickets between them.

In the rare moments when Kiwi sports fans are not discussing rugby, they are pondering whether Williamson is ready for Test cricket.

Williamson has scored 588 first-class runs at 53.45 for Northern Districts this season including 192 against Auckland last week.

“I’m just excited at the potential opportunity to play Australia which is the pinnacle of cricket, to play at the highest level but also to play against the Aussies,” the 19-year-old told a press conference in Hamilton.

“I do have idols. There’s players like Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke who I’ve admired from a very young age, just the way they play.”

Kiwi fans are already comparing Williamson to batting superstar Martin Crowe, who scored 9 on debut aged 19 against Australia’s Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson in Wellington 28 years ago.

Crowe went on to average 45.36 in a 77-Test career and established a reputation as one of the game’s most stylish batsmen.

New Zealand coach Mark Greatbatch defended the selection of Williamson in the 13-man squad.

“We resisted the temptation to bring him in earlier but we’ve decided with one Test left, he’s a young lad playing well, very talented and it’s an opportunity for him to be involved in our environment,” Greatbatch said.

“If he does make the starting 11 I’m sure he’ll acquit himself well.”

Asked if Williamson’s selection would be like sending a lamb to the slaughter, Greatbatch countered: “I don’t see any Denis Lillee or Jeff Thomson, or Glenn McGrath or Shane Warne.

“The lad is pretty experienced for his young years and he’s got a good head on him.”

Williamson said he had recently chatted with Crowe, who is doing some mentoring work with the Black Caps, about the pressures of Test cricket.

“We discussed these sorts of things. Just the mental side of the game,” Williamson said.

“It was very interesting.”

Harris said the Aussies would have to do some more homework on the new kid.

“I didn’t even know his name until you said it,” Harris said.

“Never heard of him, but we’ll do some homework on him and work out how we’re going to get him out.”

Williamson comes into the squad for paceman Daryl Tuffey, whose hand was broken by a rising delivery from Australian paceman Mitchell Johnson in Wellington.

-AAP

Black Caps considering 31yo debutant

New Zealand is considering handing a debut to 31-year-old seamer Brent Arnel for Friday’s first Test against Australia at Wellington’s Basin Reserve.

Kiwi skipper Daniel Vettori said the pitch appears to have a bit of grass on top and may suit a four-man pace attack, rather than including second spinner Jeetan Patel.

“It depends how much it dries over the next little while,” Vettori said.

“If you looked at it now you’d say it’s got a bit of greenness in it and a bit of moisture so you look at the seamers.

“But we’ll delay that decision as late as we can.

“We’re trying to pick a team that can cover every option. You know what you’re going to get when you come to the Basin.

“He (Arnel) has been waiting in the wings a little while and has been involved in a few squads.

“Hopefully if he does get the nod then he is ready.”

New Zealand squad: Daniel Vettori (c), Brent Arnel, Martin Guptill, Peter Ingram, Brendon McCullum, Tim McIntosh, Chris Martin, Jeetan Patel, Mathew Sinclair, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor, Daryl Tuffey, BJ Watling.

-AAP

Indian cricket team leaves for South Africa

Mumbai, Sept 18 (ANI): The Indian cricket team left for South Africa from here on Friday to participate in the Champions Trophy.

South Africa has been a happing hunting ground for India who was runners-up in the one-day World Cup in 2003 and Twenty20 World Cup champions four years later.

India has received a boost before their Champions Trophy campaign when in-form opener Gautam Gambhir was passed fit to return after injury.

The left-hander has recovered from a groin strain and will travel with the team to South Africa, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said in a statement on Thursday.

India, already without the explosive Virender Sehwag, were sweating on Gambhir’s fitness after the Delhi batsman missed this month’s tri-series in Sri Lanka.

India won the Colombo tournament, also involving New Zealand and the hosts, and went into the prestigious eight-team event as one of the favourites after not having lost a one-day series in the past year.

India has been grouped with defending and world champions Australia, Twenty20 champions Pakistan and former champions West Indies in the preliminary phase.

A young Indian batting unit struggled against short-pitched bowling in this year’s Twenty20 World Cup in England.

Ishant Sharma will spearhead the five-man pace attack in the absence of experienced left-arm pacer Zaheer Khan, who has been ruled out until the end of the year after undergoing surgery on an injured shoulder. (ANI)

Indian cricket team practices hard in Bangalore

Bangalore, Aug 30 (ANI): The Indian cricket team was seen sweating hard on the practice ground in Bangalore for the tri-series in Sri Lanka, featuring New Zealand from September 8-14.

It was the third day of the four-day conditioning camp on Saturday, which was held under the vigilant eyes of coach Gary Kirsten, fielding coach Robin Singh and trainer Ramji Srinivasan.

Apart from the regular exercise sessions, the players played football, which is also a part of their fitness regime.

India has recalled Rahul Dravid to the one-day team for the first time in almost two years to bolster their batting in Lanka and on pacy South African pitches during the September 22-October 5 Champions Trophy.

Batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar has also returned after opting out of the one-day series in the West Indies, which India won 2-1 last month.

Ishant Sharma will spearhead the five-man pace attack in the absence of experienced left-arm pacer Zaheer Khan, who has been ruled out of action until the end of the year after surgery on an injured shoulder.

The selected team for Sri Lankan series includes Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain), Yuvraj Singh, Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir, Rahul Dravid, Suresh Raina, Yusuf Pathan, Harbhajan Singh, Ashish Nehra, Rudra Pratap Singh, Ishant Sharma, Dinesh Karthik, Praveen Kumar, Amit Mishra and Abhishek Nayar. (ANI)

Indian cricket team toils at Bangalore conditioning camp

Bangalore, Aug 28(ANI): The Indian cricket team sweated hard on Friday, the second day of a four day conditioning camp that is being held at the M Chinnaswamy stadium here.

The conditioning camp before team’s trip to Sri Lanka is being held under the watchful eyes of coach Gary Kirsten, fielding coach Robin Singh and trainer Ramji Srinivasan.

Apart from regular exercise sessions, the players played football as part of their fitness regime.

India will participate in a tri-series in Sri Lanka that features New Zealand from Sept. 8-14. It has not lost a one-day series in the past year following a surprise tri-series victory in Australia last February.

India has recalled Rahul Dravid to the one-day team for the first time in almost two years to bolster their batting in Lanka and on pacy South African pitches at the Sept. 22-Oct. 5 Champions Trophy.

Batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar has also returned after opting out of the one-day series in the West Indies, which India had won 2-1.

Ishant Sharma will spearhead the five-man pace attack in the absence of experienced left-arm pacer Zaheer Khan, who has been ruled out of action until the end of the year following surgery on an injured shoulder.

The selected team for Sri Lankan series includes Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain), Yuvraj Singh, Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir, Rahul Dravid, Suresh Raina, Yusuf Pathan, Harbhajan Singh, Ashish Nehra, Rudra Pratap Singh, Ishant Sharma, Dinesh Karthik, Praveen Kumar, Amit Mishra and Abhishek Nayar. (ANI)

McGrath’s advice to Johnson: Keep it simple

Sydney, Aug.27 (ANI): Former Australian fast bowler Glenn McGrath has told left-arm quick Mitchell Johnson not to overdo or over think things and keep things simple if he wants to reach his considerable potential as a Test match bowler.

McGrath, who has high hopes for Johnson and the other two members of Australia’s Ashes pace attack – Ben Hilfenhaus and Peter Siddle, feels Johnson’s potential, will be reached only through a clear head uncluttered by countless theories about his bowling technique.

Though finishing with a solid return of 20 wickets at 32 in the Ashes series, Johnson was not the rampant force he was in South Africa and earlier at home.

“All his problems were sorted out when Michael Clarke said to him ‘just bowl fast’,” McGrath said.

“I can understand that. He needs to keep it simple. That is the key. He just has to clear his head and not complicate things. Less things can go wrong when you keep it simple. I just used to switch a voice off in my head, pick out a song to sing at the top of my mark and trust myself that my body knew how to bowl. It didn’t always work. But if you win the battle with yourself you are 75 per cent towards being successful,” the Courier Mail quoted McGrath, as saying.

“That’s all Mitch needs to do. Just relax. Even when he isn’t bowling well he still takes wickets. It is just a confidence thing. He needs to just run in and bowl,” he added.

McGrath also felt that Brett Lee can again return as a Test match force for Australia but the Johnson-Siddle-Hilfenhaus union has the potential to be a long-term one for Australia.

“Those three guys will grow as time goes on. They were the leading wicket-takers in the Ashes from both teams. You can’t really sledge them too much because I think they have done pretty well,” he said.

McGrath said Lee bowled well in an early tour game before being injured and cannot be dismissed from Test match calculations this summer when Australia play the West Indies and Pakistan in three-Test series.(ANI)

Poor batting, not absence of spin cost Australia the Ashes: Hilditch

Melbourne, Aug 25 (ANI): Chairman of Australian selectors, Andrew Hilditch, has rejected criticism for not playing spinner Nathan Hauritz in the fifth Ashes Test, and said that Australia lost the Test because they got 160 in the first innings.

Hilditch admitted that his panel was “gutted” by Australia’s 2-1 Ashes loss to England.

He said the Australian team’s failure to prevail in big moments ultimately derailed its Ashes campaign, but did not expect players or selectors’ heads to roll as a result.

The national selectors – Hilditch, David Boon, Merv Hughes and Jamie Cox – were under fire, with a host of former players saying they had erred in choosing an all-pace attack for The Oval.

But Hilditch said it was simply a matter of misreading the pitch. “We read it as a wicket that was looking like a road, which was the assessment of everybody,” he said.

“We thought it was a wicket that would suit the four fast bowlers that played at Headingley and it was a reluctance to change a winning side from the fourth Test. It would be an over simplification to say that is the reason we lost the Test. We lost the Test because we got 160 in the first innings,” The Herald Sun quoted him, as saying.

“Obviously the selector on duty has a big role in assessing wicket conditions, but in the end we all communicate and made the decision. Jamie Cox was the selector on duty but everybody misread the wicket – captain and coach included. That just happens from time to time,” Hilditch added.

Ponting agreed that “we probably got that wrong. Not before the game, we thought we were picking the right attack for the conditions that we saw. But in hindsight, a specialist spinner would have been pretty handy out there.”

Spin legend Shane Warne said that “everyone should be under the microscope” and that “someone would have to take the rap” for Hauritz not playing at The Oval.

“To win a Test match you’ve got to take 20 wickets and Hauritz would have made a difference on this wicket. England wouldn’t have made 330 in the first innings,” he added.

Former Australian captain Ian Chappell said the selectors needed to remember to “pick a team for five days, not just the first one.” (ANI)

Ashes loss: Cricket Australia CEO absolves Ponting, selection committee

Melbourne, Aug.24 (ANI): Cricket Australia on Monday extended full support to both the national selection committee and team skipper Ricky Ponting, saying neither would be targeted because of Australia’s Ashes series loss to England.

Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland said sacking Ponting from the captaincy would be “completely unfair”, and added that his leadership and performance during the series was top class.

“Ricky’s had a very, very good series. He’s been under incredible pressure. I thought the dignity and poise that he showed in defeat was something that all Australians should be very proud of,” Sutherland told reporters here.

He also absolved the National Selection Panel (NSP) of responsibility for the defeat in England. He defended the team management for the final line-up, implying that not all gambles are likely to pay-off.

“I think everyone will be looking for people to blame. I don’t think that in any way we can hold the selectors accountable for us losing the Ashes. At the end of the day, the players go out and do the business on the field,” he said.

“Only six or seven months ago we had a fantastic series in South Africa where we beat the No. 1 team in the world (2-1 in the Tests) with a pretty similar line-up. The selectors were hailed for their selection, I guess in some ways the perceived risks they took in backing young talent. I think it would be jumping to conclusions to be blaming the selectors for this,” he added.

Sutherland said it would be unfair to criticize the decision to play a four-pronged pace attack at the expense of Hauritz, while it was clear that Australia effectively lost the game when they conceded a huge first-innings lead of 172.

“That’s something that the selectors can explain for themselves,” Sutherland said.

“Whether that had any bearing on the result of the game, who will know? We’ve lost the game by 200 runs, it’s a pretty significant defeat, and having a spinner in the side wouldn’t have helped us in the first innings, where we were bowled out for 160 and effectively lost the game,” he added.

Sutherland admitted that plenty of work had to be done to reinstate Australia’s position at the top.

“I don’t think Cricket Australia is under any illusions as to where this team is at. We’re definitely in a rebuilding phase after losing some of the best players to ever play cricket for Australia, and right now, what you get with a young and relatively inexperienced team is some ebbs and flows in performance. We saw a little bit of that in the Ashes series. Our best cricket was very, very good, and our not-so-good cricket, in a couple of critical moments, were really the reasons why we let the Ashes slip,” Sutherland said.

Commenting on likely changes to the selection panel, Sutherland said at least one position in the three-man panel, led by Andrew Hilditch, would be converted to a full-time role.

“The selection panel is to some extent, professional already. We have in recent times had a review, where we are now moving to a phase of becoming more professional in our approach to selection. It’s not just selection, it’s a matter of identifying talent and being partners in the development of talent and I think that’s part of the review and going forward we’ll be moving towards having at least one of the selection panel full time,” he said.

However, he ruled out the possibility of appointing the captain and coach to the panel, on the lines of what New Zealand Cricket adopted on Sunday.

“The captain and the coach are always heavily consulted before matches but the structure that we prefer is for the selectors to be independent and making their own decisions and to be accountable for selection on that basis,” he said. (ANI)

Ashes: Strauss says Poms must play to win

London, Aug.20 (ANI): England cricket captain Andrew Strauss has said that he is prepared to risk losing Andy Flintoff’s farewell Test to try to win back the Ashes.

Asked if he was prepared to risk losing the Ashes to force the pace against Australia, Strauss replied:

“We’ve got to. It’s a simple as that. Every Test match you play you go out there with the intention of winning the Test.

The way you win Test matches is to gain the advantage on the first two or three days and then push for victory on the final two days. You don’t win it on day one. We need to play smart cricket in the first half of the game,” Strauss said.

With the forecast of showers for the first two days, the chances of spinner Nathan Hauritz playing has diminished. Seamer Stuart Clark is now favoured to hang on to his spot as part of the four-pronged pace attack that Australia used successfully in the fourth Test in Headingley, reports The Daily Telegraph.

Strauss believes that Flintoff’s farewell Test could become the perfect finish to an epic career.

“It’s kind of the perfect storm, it’s his last game so he is going to be completely motivated to go out on a high. It’s a must-win Ashes Test match, at home and a full house. The script is written perfectly. He can lift the others with his performances. For a big game like this it is a massive plus to have him in the side,” Strauss said. (ANI)

McGrath predicts 5-0 series whitewash for Australia

Sydney, July 7 (ANI): Former Australian star Glenn McGrath has predicted that the current Australian squad has the potential of cleaning out England 5-0 in the Ashes series which begins in Cardiff on Wednesday.

Though McGrath had made a similar prediction before the 2005 series, the retired pace great said he was impressed by Australia’s Test series win in South African this year.

“I’ve got total confidence in the boys, especially watching the way they played in South Africa in the last Test series. That would have given them a lot of confidence and they showed what they can do and the huge potential that they’ve got,” The Herald Sun quoted McGrath, as saying.If they can do the same here and maybe even improve in one or two areas, they will do really well and probably win 5-0,” he added.

Earlier, McGrath was called into an Australian team meeting to provide essential tips to the new-look pace attack.

Australia’s pace attack will head into the series with Peter Siddle and Mitchell Johnson in sparkling form. (ANI)

West Indies beat India in second ODI by eight wickets

Jamaica (West Indies), June 29 (ANI): A skipper’s knock of 95 by Mahendra Singh Dhoni, could not prevent India from suffering a humiliating eight-wicket defeat at the hands of the West Indies in the second one-day international at Jamiaca’s Sabina Park on Sunday.

India were dismissed for 188 in 48.2 overs and in reply the West Indians romped to victory, powered by knocks of 64 and 85 by openers Chris Gayle and Runako Morton in 34.1 overs.

The four match series is now leveled at 1-1.

Earlier, the Indian batting line-up collapsed to the West Indies pace attack led by Ravi Rampaul (4/37), Jerome Taylor (3/35) and Dwayne Bravo (3/26).

Dhoni struck six boundaries and a couple of sixes in his innings and stitched together a record 101-run partnership for the ninth wicket with RP Singh (23) to lead India’s recovery from a precarious 82 for eight in 22 overs.

Yuvraj Singh (35) was the only other significant contributor to the Indian score. (ANI)

England may reject Aussie plan for Ashes preparation

Sydney, May 28 (IANS) Ricky Ponting’s plans to field an extra player in Australia’s two Ashes warm-up matches can go up in smoke with England reportedly opposed to the idea.

England is unlikely to allow Ponting play an extra man in both games as he seeks to give returning quicks Brett Lee and Stuart Clark a chance for the Test selection.

Ponting said it was crucial to gauge the form of his pace attack in both four-dayers to help pick a side for the first Test in Cardiff, which starts July 8, Herald Sun reported Thursday.

As a result, Cricket Australia (CA) wanted England to grant permission to field 12 players against Sussex and England Lions.

According to English newspaper The Guardian, England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) is likely to risk an Ashes row by refusing the request. However, the ECB is set to offer a compromise.

Australia would be allowed to field extra men in the initial warm-up game against Sussex at Hove, starting June 24, but it must play a regular 11-a-side match against the Lions at Worcester from July 1, the report said.

The compromise would mirror England’s preparations for the last Ashes series in Australia in 2006-07 when it played 14 in its opening tour game against New South Wales but then played with 11 against South Australia.

England also had a one-day match against the Prime Minister’s XI in Canberra before the first Test in Brisbane.

Left-arm Australian spearhead Mitchell Johnson is the only pacer guaranteed a place in Cardiff on what is expected to be a spin-friendly pitch.

With Lee (foot and ankle) and Clark (elbow) returning from international layoffs, the selectors face a difficult task in sorting out the best attack particularly after the South African success of Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus.