Ponting’s 27th ton helps Australia beat England in fifth ODI

Nottingham (UK), Sep.16 (ANI): Ricky Ponting scored a brilliant 126 of 109 balls to keep Australia in the hunt for a 7-0 whitewash of their one-day series against England, leading his side to a four-wicket victory in the fifth one-day international at Trent Bridge on Tuesday.

Ponting’s 27th ton in ODIs included three sixes and 14 fours, as Australia raced to 302 for six wickets with 10 balls to spare in reply to England’s total of 299 from their 50 overs.

He was well supported by deputy Michael Clarke, who reached 52 off 64.

Irishman Eoin Morgan’s maiden half-century steered England to their best score of the series in a dead rubber after Australia clinched the series 4-0 at Lord’s on Saturday.

Mitchell Johnson brought up the winning runs with a six off Ryan Sidebottom to remain unbeaten on 18, while Cameron White was not out 24.

Poor fielding frustrated England captain Andrew Struass, who demanded improvement from his batsmen after the first four matches.

“Our batters went out and played with a much more bold approach and that paid dividends today. The fielding was poor and that’s something that there should be no excuse for, we do a lot of work on the fielding and we should be better than that,” Fox Sports quoted Strauss, as saying.

The tourists rested Brett Lee, who claimed five wickets in the previous match, replacing him with fellow pacer Peter Siddle.

England brought in Mascarenhas for Luke Wright, who was hit on the toe on Monday while batting against a bowling machine set to mimic Lee’s inswinging yorkers which proved so effective last weekend.(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)

Ponting should be last off sinking ship, not first to jump in the lifeboat: Thommo

London, Aug 25(ANI): Former Australian cricketer Jeff Thomson has said that Australian captain Ricky Ponting, who is flying home for a rest, should not abandon his “sinking ship” but rather stay back and clear up the mess in England.

Thomson said that unless Ponting has some urgent personal business, he should not desert his inexperienced team, which has lost the Ashes.

“The captain should always be last off his sinking ship, not the first to jump in the lifeboat. It doesn’t look good when he loses the Ashes and then doesn’t hang around to face the music with his team-mates,” Thomson wrote in the Mirror.

Thomson also said that there should be accountability for the defeat and felt that those who were guilty should accept their fault.

“How the hell did the Aussies manage to lose the series 2-1 when they scored eight hundreds to England’s two, and the three leading wicket-takers were all Australian? Heads must roll – and you can start with the selectors,” he wrote.

He further critised Australia’s selection panel and the think tank for going in with four seamers and not including specialist spinner Nathan Hauritz in the team.
“Even the blokes in the crowd could see, from 100 yards away, that the pitch was as dry as a camel’s tongue. Yet we picked four seamers and left a part-time spinner in Marcus North to take on the workload of a specialist,” Thomson added.

Though, Thomson did praise Ponting for his individual performance, he also blasted some of his dodgy captaincy tactics, specifically the last 11 overs in the first Test at Cardiff.

“Ultimately, those overs he gave to North’s gentle off-spin at Sophia Gardens, instead of getting Peter Siddle to shove a few bouncers under Monty Panesar’s nose, proved the difference between a 2-2 draw and Australia losing 2-1. Having said all that, I thought England played a good game at The Oval,” he wrote. (ANI)

Ashes series loss will end Australia’s dominance of world cricket

London, Aug. 22 (ANI): Should Australia lose the fifth and final Ashes Test being played at The Oval, it could signal the end the side’s domination of world cricket.

According to the Courier Mail, only something very special, or days of unforecast rain, can prevent Australia losing the fifth Test, the Ashes and ultimately tumbling as low as fourth on the official world Test rankings. Australia is already down to third on the one-day rankings.

A loss will leave Ricky Ponting, one of Australia’s greatest players and most successful leaders, just the second captain in 132 years of Ashes history to lose two series in England.

The other was Australia’s first touring captain, Billy Murdoch, well over 100 years ago.

It shapes as Australia’s third series loss in five, which includes its first home Test series loss in 17 years last summer.

When Mark Taylor led his side to victory on the 1995 tour of the West Indies, it was considered the unofficial handing over of the world championship.

Australia was already halfway through winning eight successive Ashes series and three successive World Cups followed, the last two with undefeated campaigns.

The reality is stark. For all the great names to retire or drift away over the past two years, more will follow.

Brett Lee has 310 Test wickets but did not play a Test on tour and will be 33 when Australia next turns out in a Test.

Stuart Clark is already that age and on this tour has also been behind the new pace trio of Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus, the three leading wicket-takers in the series.

Most worrying is the continued collapse of Mike Hussey in the middle order. Another confused duck has reinforced his fourth poor series in a row.

That way he can get some runs and some confidence in the Sheffield Shield for Western Australia.

Phil Hughes is the most exciting of the 20-somethings coming through and he was dropped after two Tests, deemed not to have the technique to survive at Test level.

It may be that Phil Jaques can regain fitness after debilitating back problems and the form which saw him score three centuries in 11 Tests, freeing up Shane Watson to move down the order as a real all-rounder.

In the end it’s not the big numbers that matter but the big moments that will count.

Fast bowler Stuart Broad has again highlighted that when this Australian side is bad, it is terrible. (ANI)

Oz paceman Siddle delighted at being leading wicket taker

London, Aug 21(ANI): Australian paceman Peter Siddle has become the leading wicket taker in this Ashes series, and following the struggle that he had to go through in the first two Test matches, he is delighted with the achievement.

Siddle took four wickets for 63 runs on the opening day of the fifth Ashes Test match at The Oval, giving him 20 wickets at an average of just under 27.

“I didn’t even realise that. I’m just happy to be able to go out there now – with how I started in the series, I was a little bit disappointed personally – to now be a little bit more on track and bowling to how I like to play, and lucky enough to have had a bit of success,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Siddle, as saying.

“I’m happy if I can just bowl well and do well for the team, whether it’s bowling a lot of maidens and the bloke at the other end getting the wickets, or I’m getting the wickets,” he added.

Siddle further said that aggression comes naturally to him and has sharpened up his bowling consistency, which makes him feel comfortable and more at ease while bowling.

“I don’t think I had to change natural aggression. I showed in South Africa that’s the way I play my game and I went at just over two an over. I think it’s being more consistent and patient with my lines and lengths,” Siddle said.

“The aggression’s been the same all the way through the tour. I’ve sharpened up on the consistency that I’ve bowled with, and that’s probably working for me,” he added. (ANI)

Siddle says no place for spinners in The Oval Test

London, Aug 21(ANI): Australian paceman Peter Siddle has backed Australian selectors for their decision to play four quicks and use part-time spinners in the series decider at The Oval.

The Oval pitch turned low and slow on the opening day of the Test match, and Australian selectors were being asked if they should have opted for an off-spinner -Nathan Hauritz- in the team.

“I don’t think it’s deteriorating, still a good wicket. Still a nice wicket to bowl on. It’s going to stay pretty solid and will be a pretty good batting wicket over the next two or three days,” The Fox Sports quoted Siddle, as saying.

“I don’t think spin will be a massive part of it. When all four quicks stuck together and bowled in partnership, we had success,” he added.

Australia used part-time spinner Marcus North, who extracted some sharp turn and bounce from the pitch in the 14 overs that he bowled during the first day.

Meanwhile, England batsman Ian Bell expressed surprise at Hauritz not being picked fot the Test match.

“I guess when you look at it where we are now after day one, hindsight’s a great thing,” Bell said.

“When you look at it now, a little bit surprised. Again Australia beat us in two and a bit days at Headingley and that is pretty tough on someone not to get picked after such a good win,” he added. (ANI)

Clark set to play in Ashes decider

London, Aug.20 (ANI): Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting has hinted strongly that the selectors are likely to keep faith in fast bowler Stuart Clark at the expense of Nathan Hauritz in the final Ashes Test beginning today What we see at the moment is what we expect,” said Ponting who, at 34, will surely be playing his last Ashes Test on English soil.

“We’re going to have to see something really different to change the make-up of the side considering everything worked really well. Today the wicket looks particularly good. It could dry a little bit,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Ponting, as saying.

He didn’t rule out a return for Brett Lee, who has missed the entire series to date because of injury, but if any changes were to be made, spinner Nathan Hauritz would be the more likely choice.

Meanwhile, England captain Andrew Strauss said: “We know the situation ahead of us, we need to win the game, so in a way that helps your clarity of mind and you know what needs to be achieved.”

The Test will be talismanic England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff’s last before he becomes a limited-overs specialist, a decision forced on him by persistent injury problems.

Australia (likely): Shane Watson, Simon Katich, Ricky Ponting (capt), Mike Hussey, Michael Clarke, Marcus North, Brad Haddin, Mitchell Johnson, Stuart Clark, Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus.

England (likely): Andrew Strauss (capt), Alastair Cook, Ian Bell, Jonathan Trott, Paul Collingwood, Matt Prior, Andrew Flintoff, Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann, Steve Harmison, James Anderson. (ANI)

Oz selector Hilditch indicates Clark will be dropped for Ashes decider

Adelaide (Australia), Aug.12 (ANI): The chairman of Australia’s cricket selection committee, Andrew Hilditch, has declared that Ben Hilfenhaus, Mitchell Johnson and Peter Siddle are the future of the Australian bowling attack and that fourth Test hero Stuart Clark will be dumped for the Ashes decider at The Oval.

“Stuart Clark got the nod (last Test) and he did a good job, but the other three bowled exceptionally well also and took more wickets,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Hilditch, as saying.

“So, I think we go into the final Test with those three fast bowlers as our leading fast bowlers at the moment, plus spinner Nathan Hauritz.”

SBS Ashes commentator and former Test spinner Stuart MacGill, however, led a chorus of support for Clark’s retention – claiming he reignited Australia’s Ashes campaign at Headingley.

The New South Wales seamer made an immediate impact with 3-18 in his first innings but appears to have lost support after being belted in the second innings, when he finished with 0-74 off 11 overs.

“I don’t think only Stuart Clark would be hard done by if he missed out on the final Test – I think the Australian public would be hard done by,” MacGill said.

“I believe Andrew Hilditch’s comments that the future of Australian bowling does lie with Johnson, Hilfenhaus and Siddle. But we have to pick a team for now, not tomorrow, and Clark needs to be in that team,” MacGill added.

Hilditch expressed his views on the pace line-up as he unveiled the limited-overs squads in Adelaide.

Former Test spinner Greg Matthews said Clark, his Sydney University grade cricket teammate, had “left the door open for the fifth Test axe” when he leaked runs and looked tired in the second innings at Headingley.

Matthews said he could understand the selectors wanting to bring Hauritz back in to the XI, adding that he believed the New South Wales tweaker had been “the second best bowler for Australia” in the Ashes series behind Hilfenhaus. (ANI)

Ponting takes rookies on a spiritual journey at Lords

London, July 16 (ANI): Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting became a tour guide for his rookie team at Lords on Wednesday.

Ponting, on his fourth Ashes tour, didn’t have to wear one of the green blazers of officials who guide visitors around the game’s spiritual home.

He took pacer Peter Siddle and spinner Nathan Hauritz, on their first visit to the home of cricket.

“It was their first time at the ground today … I had to show Sids the way out on to the ground. He didn’t know where he was going, he was walking around down the bottom there getting lost,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Ponting, as saying.

“I said ‘Out through that door, mate, through that Long Room there.’ He found his way to the nets.”

Australia boast of an imposing record at Lord’s, only losing here once in the last century _ and that was in 1934.

Ponting, who carries a scar on his right cheek after being hit by Steve Harmison at Lord’s in 2005, said his team was inspired by the history of the place.

“The history that comes with this ground and the very proud record that Australia have had here for so long makes you feel good about the place when you arrive,” he said.

“The guys in the team meeting were talking about our record here and how much everyone has been looking forward to playing here and what it means to a lot of our younger guys.

Whenever you play at these sort of venues around the world, you just feel better when you arrive,” he added.

Siddle, 24, will fulfil a childhood dream when he walks through the Long Room and charges out on to the ground when the second Test starts tonight.

“Growing up, there were two Tests I wanted to play in,” Siddle said.

“As a Victorian, it was always the MCG on the Boxing Day Test and I got that opportunity last year. The other one was an Ashes series playing at Lord’s. To get to fulfil them at such an early age is a great honour and it’s just amazing history and the tradition of playing ere. It’s going to be an amazing feeling running out on the first day,” he added. (ANI)

Warne says the side that uses the new ball well will be the Ashes winner

Las Vegas, July 4 (ANI): Who uses the new ball better – Australia or England – will determine the winner of the 2009 Ashes series, believes former leg-spinner Shane Warne.

“They have to take early wickets because they are going to be flat wickets,” the Courier Mail quoted Warne as saying in the gambling capital of the world.e also said that this series would determine Ponting’s captaincy?

“After the 2005 series loss in England, I think he will feel there is some unfinished business. He was the first Australian captain in decades to lose the Ashes in England. It is a big tour for him and his captaincy. His captaincy will be under the microscope from the media and former players, but I think he is up for it,” said Warne.

He also said that spin could play a significant role in the series as the weather is hot in England at this time of the year and the wickets are going to be really dry.

As far as the bowling line up for Australia was concerned, Warne said that he expected Peter Siddle, Brett Lee and Mitchell Johnson to take the field at Cardiff on July 8.

“Mitchell Johnson has turned into a superstar. The other two pace spots are up for grabs. Siddle deserves his spot. He has earned the right to bowl in the first Test. The third spot … I would go with Brett, I think he deserves the opportunity to have the first crack at it,” said Warne.
The batting line up was pretty much decided, he said, adding that Australia are definitely the favourites.

“I really believe that it will be a close series. England’s recent form has been pretty ordinary, but they lift for the Ashes,” he said. (ANI)

Siddle predicts on-field verbal spats with Pietersen

London, June 29(ANI): Australian fast bowler Peter Siddle has predicted plenty of on-field verbal spats between the Australians and England’s star batsman Kevin Pietersen during the upcoming Ashes series, which is scheduled to begin from July 8.

“I am pretty sure there is going to be a little bit said out in the field here and there. Pietersen is a pretty confident lad and he likes to say a little bit around out there on the field. So I am sure there is going to be a few little run-ins between us and him, no doubt,” Fox Sports quoted Siddle, as saying.

Siddle, who has regularly been involved in on-field niggles, has also admitted to enjoying the verbal sparring between teams.

Earlier, during a tour to South Africa early this year, crowds following regular spats had heckled him.

“It is always a good challenge and always a good little war between you and that one or two batsmen out there. But as long as you can back it up and be the successful one out of the little war,” Siddle said.

The Australian team’s aggressive nature and Pietersen’s attitude could result in some fiery moments in the Ashes series. (ANI)

No balls can cost Oz bowlers Ashes selection, warns Nielsen

Melbourne, June 26 (ANI): Australian coach Tim Nielsen has warned his bowlers to stop bowling no balls or it could cost them a berth in the Ashes Tests.

Nielsen was furious that his players were called for overstepping the mark 22 times in 80 overs during the four-day match against Sussex County in Hove on Friday.

With competition so tight for bowling spots, he admitted it could make the difference at the selection table before the first Ashes Test on July 8 in Cardiff, FOX Sports reported.

“You would hope not, but yes. The thing is, it seems to me where ever we play the length between the popping crease and the stumps is the same. It is something we have to fix up,” Nielsen said.

Brett Lee bowled eight no balls, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus on five occasions each and even off-spinner Nathan Hauritz crossed the line three times.

“Shocking, pulling my hair out about that, (it is) the only thing I am a bit grumpy about. I think we bowled about 18 or 19 of them so look I think … I don’t know. We don’t bowl them in Twenty20 maybe because it is a free hit so the implications are greater for a no ball in Twenty20 cricket,” Nielsen said.

Like other grounds in England, the County Ground in Hove has a significant slope and Nielsen admitted this had been a factor. (ANI)

Twenty20 no guide to Ashes line up, says Ponting

Sydney, May 27 (ANI): Australian captain Ricky Ponting has said next month’s Twenty20 championship would have little or no impact on the hotly debated bowling line-up for the first Test against England.

Australia is scheduled to play four-day matches against Sussex in Hove and then the second-tier England Lions in Worcester in the days leading up to the first Test at Sophia Gardens, which starts on July 8.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, at least one of the five pacers in the 16-man Ashes tour party – Mitchell Johnson, Stuart Clark, Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and Lee – must be omitted for the Cardiff Test and in all likelihood two of them could miss out because of the prospect of the Welsh pitch being tailor-made for spin.

With Johnson, the man of the series in South Africa in March, certain to spearhead the attack and both Clark and Siddle high in the pecking order, the World Twenty20, beginning next week in England, appeared to loom as a virtual audition for Lee and Hilfenhaus to press their claims.

However, before the Australian Twenty20 squad’s departure for England today, Ponting said the practice matches, not the hit-and-hope world championship, would be the key to solving the tourists’ fast-bowling selection dilemma.

“I don’t think you can really take much out of form in Twenty20 cricket when you’re looking at Test matches,” the Australian captain said at the squad’s training base at Coolum on the unshine Coast yesterday. (ANI)

Oz pacer Johnson believes he has Strauss’s number

Perth (Australia), May 21 (ANI): The current leader of the Australian pace attack, Mitchell Johnson, believes that he has England cricket captain Andrew Strauss’s number.ohnson, who understands the intricate principles of swings and roundabouts, reckons the Poms will experience difficulties in handling the Australian pace attack.

As far England predicting the demise of Australia’s left-handed batsmen at the hands of their swing bowlers, Johnson says they will have a similar problem.

The Australia quick, who has emerged as one of the most damaging fast bowlers in world cricket in the past 12 months, knows that what dips in to a right-hander dips away from a leftie and he thinks that could be equally troubling for Strauss.

“In South Africa I started to swing the ball, and him (Strauss) being a left-handed batsmen it will go away from him – and I like bowling to lefties,” Fox Sports quoted him, as saying.

“He has been scoring a few runs, but hopefully putting a bit of pressure on him then some other players will follow,” Johnson added.

Veteran Australia bowlers Stuart Clark and Brett Lee will join Johnson in the Ashes squad and will be battling to squeeze in past the incumbents Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus.

Clark said he thought only one pace man had an automatic right to a place in the Test line-up.

“The way I read it are the guys who bowled in South Africa are in the front position,” he said.

“Obviously Mitchell is going to play and the rest of us are competing for two or three spots.”

It will be difficult to remove Siddle from his position and Hilfenhaus will be a handful with his movement in English conditions. Johnson said he did not feel threatened having the veterans Clark and Lee back.

“I spent the last Ashes series in Australia around the guys, and now to be part of the squad and hopefully get a few games is a big deal and a big deal for Australian cricket,” Johnson said.

Johnson conceded the England bowlers were showing some good recent form – and the batting looked strong, too. (ANI)

Swann’s spin may be England’s secret weapon against the Aussies

Melbourne, May 13 (ANI): Cricket observers in Australia have admitted for the first time in 16 years that England possesses the most threatening spin bowler, off-spinning extrovert Graeme Swann.

Spin coach Terry Jenner is very impressed with Swann, who used to front a rock group called Dr Comfort and the Lurid Revelations.

Eight years after he was set adrift by former coach Duncan Fletcher, Swann is the leading wicket-taker in world this year with 25 Test victims, ahead of Australians Mitchell Johnson and Peter Siddle and South African spearhead Dale Steyn (all on 20).

“He’s a breath of fresh air because he is continually trying to change his pace, he gets above the eyes, and the ball that got (Shivnarine) Chanderpaul in the first Test was a pearler because it brought him half forward, half back, next thing it’s history. Whereas Monty Panesar bowls very accurately but very predictably, Graeme Swann takes predictability out of it a bit and that is one of his plusses,” The Age quoted Jenner, as saying.

“He got three wickets in each innings and there was no doosra to be seen, so all those people are infatuated and think we should increase the flex to 20 degrees to allow these blokes to ping the doosra, as far as I’m concerned Graeme Swann shows that so long as you’ve got some spin and you’re willing to take a risk or two, you’re in the game,” he added.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if England plays two spinners because spin is our Achilles heel,” Jenner added.

To England’s immense relief, Warne will be confined to the commentary box four years after taking 40 wickets in a losing series. This time, the spin duties are to be handled by Nathan Hauritz, a containing rather than attacking finger-spinner.

“It might be the first time England have a better spinner than us, but whether an offie can run through us I’m not sure,” said Damien Fleming, the former Australian pacer. (ANI)

‘Mastering English pitches rather than fitness Lee’s main concern’

London, May 7 (ANI): Australia’s former pace bowler Damien Fleming has said that mastering English conditions rather than fitness is Brett Lee’s greatest concern in the Ashes lead-up.

Lee was named ahead of fellow New South Welshman Doug Bollinger in Australia’s 15-man squad for the tournament, despite not having played since the Boxing Day Test against South Africa.

Recovering from operations on his foot and ankle might be tough, but succeeding where Lee has taken just 23 wickets at 45.4 in 10 Tests in England will be more of a challenge.

“If you have two full Ashes series and average around 45 it isn’t good from your perceived No. 1 or No. 2 quick,” The Herald Sun quoted Fleming, as saying.

“There’s something about the conditions, the slower pitches there. He doesn’t get a lot of bounce. He needs to learn from the two Ashes series and get back to his best. We have a fair bit of depth now,” he added.

Fleming backed the selection of Lee for the Twenty20 and Ashes campaigns after a “frustrating 12 months”.

He said the 32-year-old is no longer an automatic selection in Ricky Ponting’s Ashes XI after the emergence of Mitchell Johnson and Peter Siddle.

“Brett is looking good and has put on the weight he lost in India,” Fleming said. (ANI)

Bollinger a casualty of Lee’s Ashes campaign

Sydney, May 6 (ANI): New South Wales fast bowler Doug Bollinger must be feeling a touch unlucky not to have made it to the Australian Twenty20 squad for next month’s World Cup, especially in the wake of the selectors pitching for 32-year-old Brett Lee, who has not bowled in a match since December last year.

After a string of superb performances in the one-dayers against Pakistan, Bollinger was looming as the next cab off the rank among Australia’s pacers, but he was squeezed out of the squad by Lee’s elevation.

Bollinger was NSW’s T20 player of the year when they won the domestic title last summer and his efforts against Pakistan had moved him to the brink of World Cup selection, despite an earlier omission from a preliminary 30-man squad, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

Bollinger was unavailable for comment last night.

Hilditch said Lee’s selection was an essential part of his preparation for the Ashes.

Australian squad: Ricky Ponting (capt), Michael Clarke, Nathan Bracken, Brad Haddin, Nathan Hauritz, Ben Hilfenhaus, James Hopes, David Hussey, Mike Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Peter Siddle, Andrew Symonds, David Warner, Shane Watson. (ANI)

Bollinger a casualty of Lee’s Ashes campaign

Sydney, May 6 (ANI): New South Wales fast bowler Doug Bollinger must be feeling a touch unlucky not to have made it to the Australian Twenty20 squad for next month’s World Cup, especially in the wake of the selectors pitching for 32-year-old Brett Lee, who has not bowled in a match since December last year.

After a string of superb performances in the one-dayers against Pakistan, Bollinger was looming as the next cab off the rank among Australia’s pacers, but he was squeezed out of the squad by Lee’s elevation.

Bollinger was NSW’s T20 player of the year when they won the domestic title last summer and his efforts against Pakistan had moved him to the brink of World Cup selection, despite an earlier omission from a preliminary 30-man squad, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

Bollinger was unavailable for comment last night.

Hilditch said Lee’s selection was an essential part of his preparation for the Ashes.

Australian squad: Ricky Ponting (capt), Michael Clarke, Nathan Bracken, Brad Haddin, Nathan Hauritz, Ben Hilfenhaus, James Hopes, David Hussey, Mike Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Peter Siddle, Andrew Symonds, David Warner, Shane Watson. (ANI)

Ponting to earn close to four million dollars a year

Melbourne, May 6 (ANI): Australia cricket’s top dogs Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke will be rewarded with a million-plus dollar contracts in the next fortnight.

They will also receive 12,750 dollars a Test, 5100 dollars for a one-day international and 3835 dollars for a Twenty20 International.

Ponting also has several lucrative advertising, television and newspaper deals, which are expected to take the income of the working-class boy from northern Tasmania to over four million dollars a year.

Several advertising deals ensure Clarke is not far off the pace.

Cricket Australia and its players closely guard the value of contracts and any increase in their pay deal under the latest memorandum of understanding is unclear.

The Australian Cricketers’ Association has been in long negotiations with CA over the new memorandum. The talks have stalled several times due to the uncertainty caused by the global financial crisis.

Australia’s top players appear to have little reason for complaint.

Cricket Australia is reluctant to greatly increase the payments pool in light of world businesses tightening their belts.

Fast bowler Mitchell Johnson, a former Queensland delivery van driver, is poised for a financial bonanza and is likely to be ranked at No. 3 on Australia’s elite 25-man list, Fox Sports reports.

Johnson can expect a contract for about 850,000 dollars – a far cry from a time from 2004 when he was driving a plumbing supplies truck for a living.

Wicketkeeper Brad Haddin and out-of-form batsman Mike Hussey, who both play all three forms of the game, are likely to be the other two ranked in the top five.

Pacer Peter Siddle will be another big winner while injury-hit speedster Brett Lee and troubled all rounder Andrew Symonds will have their contracts reduced.

CA will announce the contracts in the next fortnight before the squad takes part in a pre-Ashes camp on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast from May 24. (ANI)

Lee won’t be rushed back into one-day cricket: Oz coach

Melbourne, Apr 11 (ANI): Australia’s cricket coach Tim Nielsen has said that fast bowler Brett Lee won’t be rushed back into one-day cricket too quickly during the Pakistan series starting in Dubai on April 22.

Lee, who broke down in December in the Melbourne Test against South Africa with foot and ankle injuries, is in Port Elizabeth training with his Indian Premier League side Kings XI Punjab ahead of the IPL’s five-week season, which starts in Cape Town on April 18.

However, since Lee has been selected in Australia’s squad for the Pakistan series, he’s expected to link-up with the national squad when it flies out of Johannesburg on April 18 following the fifth and final ODI match against the Proteas at Wanderers Stadium.

“We’re looking forward to him coming to Dubai. We’ll take the opportunity to sit down and have a chat with him and see how he’s going and make sure we understand where he’s at with his bowling and how he’s going with his body,” Herald Sun quoted Nielsen, as saying.

“I’m just pleased they picked him to play for us. We want our best players around playing for us whenever possible. But we can’t afford to rush him back either. We need the best plan of attack on his rehab and making sure his body is right before he starts trying to bowl flat out for Australia again,” he added.

Lee is planning to play a key role in Australia’s Ashes defence in July, although the inexperienced pairing of Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus provided solid back-up for Mitchell Johnson in Australia’s 2-1 Test triumph in South Africa last month. (ANI)