England v Bangladesh test to start after rain

Play on the third day of the second test between England and Bangladesh will start after a rain delay at 1215GMT with the hosts deciding to enforce the follow-on at Old Trafford on Sunday.

England captain Andrew Strauss opted to put Bangladesh in again after his team bowled Bangladesh out for 216, in reply to the home side’s first-innings total of 419.

The tourists lost all ten first innings wickets after tea on the second day having reached 126-0. Tamim Iqbal top-scored with 108 before off-spinner Graeme Swann claimed 5-76 as Bangladesh’s fragile batting line-up capitulated in the final session.

Bangladesh need a win to draw the series after the hosts eased to an eight-wicket victory at Lord’s in the first test.

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

England v Bangladesh – first test scoreboard

Scoreboard at the close of the second day of the first test between England and Bangladesh at Lord’s, London on Friday.

England innings

A. Strauss b Mahmudullah 83

A. Cook lbw b Shahadat Hossain 7

J. Trott c Kayes b Shahadat 226

K. Pietersen b Shakib Al Hasan 18

I. Bell b Rubel Hossain 17

E. Morgan c Mushfiqur Rahim b Shahadat Hossain 44

M. Prior run out 16

T. Bresnan c Siddique b Shahadat Hossain 25

G. Swann c Rubel b Shakib 22

J. Anderson b Shahadat Hossain 13

S. Finn not out 3

Extras (lb-10, 13-nb, 8-w) 31

Total (all out; 125 overs) 505

Fall of wickets: 1-7 2-188 3-227 4-258 5-370 6-400 7-463 8-478

9-498 10-505

Bowling: Shahadat 28-3-98-5, Robiul 22-2-107-0, Shakib

27-3-109-2, Rubel 23-0-109-1, Mahmudullah 23-3-59-1, Ashraful

2-0-13-0.

Bangladesh innings

T. Iqbal run out 55

I. Kayes c Strauss b Finn 43

J. Siddique not out 53

J. Islam not out 16

Extras (lb-1, w-3, nb-1) 5

Total (2 wickets; 53 overs) 172

Fall of wickets: 1-88 2-134

Bowling: Anderson 16-2-52-0, Bresnan 15-2-65-0, Finn

12-4-39-1, Swann 10-6-15-0

Still to bat: Ashraful, Shakib, Rahim, Mahmudullah,

Shahadat, Robiul, Rubel.

(Editing by Toby Davis; to query or comment on this story

email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

England push New Zealand out of T20 WC with three wicket defeat

St.Lucia, May 11 (ANI): England cemented a berth in the semi-finals of the ICC World T20 Championship by defeating New Zealand by three wickets in their final game of the Super Eight stage of the tournament here.

England registered their third consecutive win in as many matches in the super eight stage as they chased down a modest target of 150 set by New Zealand with three wickets and five balls to spare.

English openers started with a bang racing to 57 for one at the end of the powerplay overs. Both Craig Kieswetter (15 runs of 12 balls) and Michael Lumb (32 runs of 21 balls) provided a solid base for the middle order.

Lumb took a liking for the extra pace of Shane Bond, hitting 19 runs off his first two overs.

However, there was a little hiccup in the middle when Scott Styris cleaned up both Ravi Bopara, who replaced in-form Kevin Pietersen, and skipper Paul Collingwood cheaply.

But Eion Morgan (40) and Luke Wright (24) added 52 in 38 balls to push the Kiwis out of the tournament.

For New Zealand, Bond and Styris grabbed two wickets each, while Neil McCullum, Kyle Mills and skipper Daniel Vettori took a wicket each.

Earlier, the England bowlers restricted the Black Caps to 149 for 6. Tim Bresnan was the most economical bowler with figures of one for 29 in four overs. Bresnan’s 23 not out of 11 balls was probably the icing on the cake for him and his side.

Graeme Swann and Stuart Broad were also among the wicket takers, as both grabbed two each.

Ross Taylor top scored for the Kiwis with 44 of 33 balls, while Brendon McCullum and Styris made 33 and 31 respectively. (ANI)

Duckworth hits back at T20 criticism

Frank Duckworth, the co-creator of the Duckworth-Lewis (D/L) method for settling rain-affected matches, has leapt to its defence after it came under fire from England captain Paul Collingwood.

But he said the International Cricket Council (ICC) needs to look at the minimum length of an innings required to constitute a Twenty20 match.

Collingwood was left fuming after England suffered an eight-wicket loss to the West Indies in the visitors’ tournament opener, despite scoring 191 – a challenging Twenty20 total.

Rain, though, left the West Indies with a target of 60 from six overs.

England did secure a path through to the Super Eights after its match with Ireland this morning was declared a no-result due to rain, with Collingwood’s side progressing thanks to a superior run rate.

At present, five overs of the second innings of a Twenty20 international must be played in order for a winner to be declared.

Duckworth told The Wisden Cricketer five overs may not be enough for the method to be fair.

“The ICC ought to look into whether five overs for a valid match is appropriate because you can get this apparent distortion,” he said.

Collingwood was damning in his assessment of D/L as it applied to Twenty20, having seen his side bow out of last year’s World Twenty20 to the West Indies in similar circumstances at The Oval.

“I don’t know what equation you should have but you shouldn’t have that one,” Collingwood said.

“We’ve played a near perfect game but we’ve lost.

“There’s a major problem with this Duckworth-Lewis in this form of the game. It certainly has to be revised for this form of the game.”

But Duckworth, who devised the system with fellow statistician Tony Lewis, countered.

“While Paul Collingwood may have been angry at Messrs Duckworth and Lewis, he might have been angry at (England bowlers) Messrs (Tim) Bresnan, Graeme) Swann and co who added to the four wides that they bowled before the rain by adding four more wides.

“So, the West Indies target wasn’t just 60, it was effectively 52.

“Since Twenty20 came into the world in 2002, there have been about 70 cases of T20 with a D/L revised target or result.

“And there’s only been two moments of dissent, both by Paul Collingwood or ECB (England and Wales Cricket Board) people, both following England not doing very well against the West Indies. It’s the high-profile matches that attract attention.

“The other 68 matches – like the one that occurred earlier (on Monday, between Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe), nobody queried that and in fact the result went the other way. The side batting first (Sri Lanka) won.”

Duckworth and Lewis updated their system in October last year after examining data that Duckworth insisted proved the method did not require wholesale revision for Twenty20 matches.

“As a result of that analysis we did decide that a few changes were needed but these were only slight adjustments to the parameter of the formula,” he said.

“The important thing that we did discover was that the scoring patterns in Twenty20 fit in perfectly with our original formula derived largely from 50-over games.”

England can spring surprises in Twenty20 World Cup: Anderson

London, Apr 26 (ANI): England pacer James Anderson has said that they can spring a surprise if they play well in the Twenty20 World Cup in the Carribean.

Anderson, who looked fit and in form for Lancashire last week, contradicted both Andy Flower and Kevin Pietersen before the squad left for the World Twenty20 on Sunday.

Team Director Flower suggested that England are undercooked going into the tournament, while Pietersen said that bowlers “missed the boat” by declining to put themselves forward for the Indian Premier League and gain 20-over experience, The Times reports.

“If you look at our bowlers, we had two guys, Stuart [Broad] and Graeme Swann, who played all winter and needed a break after Bangladesh. Personally, I needed a rest from my knee and there wasn’t that opportunity to go to IPL this year,” Anderson said.

“In future years it probably would help for England if we could go there and gain more experience of Twenty20, but at the moment it is not an option.

“I will have to wait and see how things go next year. I would like to play IPL because it is exciting and the more experience we get the better,” he said.

Anderson said: “I don’t think we are undercooked. We showed in the Champions Trophy in South Africa last year that we are improving in one-day cricket and we have strengthened the right areas.”

“We will have to play very, very well, but I don’t see why we can’t win it,” The Times quoted him, as saying. (ANI)

India, Australia are Sobers favourites to lift Twenty20 World Cup title

Barbados (West Indies), Apr.21 (ANI): Former West Indies star Gary Sobers has said that India and Australia are his favourites for wresting this year’s Twenty20 World Cup title, but adds that England and the West Indies also possess the wares to deliver.

“India will have a head start on most because of their experience in the IPL and they could push the rebuilt Aussies hard, even without my big friend Sachin Tendulkar. As for the Aussies – as soon as one lot retire, in come more world-class players,” Sobers told The Sun in an interview here.

In an interview to The Sun, Sobers, who played 93 Tests for the West Indies from 1954 to 1974 and scored over 8,000 runs and claimed 235 wickets, said England’s South African imports Kevin Pietersen and hard-hitting wicketkeeper Craig Kieswetter could make the difference for England. He also said that the team’s spinners, especially the impressive Graham Swann, would be suited to the slow Caribbean wickets.

“England and my own West Indies could spring a surprise or two, but my favourites remain Australia and India, even though nothing is certain in this form of cricket,” Sober said.

Sobers said that currently he was concentrating on the Sir Garfield Sobers Festival of Golf at Sandy Lane, Royal Westmoreland and Barbados Golf Club from April 23-25, but was looking forward to the Twenty20 World Cup that begins in the Caribbean from April 30. (ANI)

Clarke wins Wisden award

Australia vice-captain Michael Clarke has been named as one of the Wisden Almanack’s Five Cricketers of the Year in the 2010 edition of cricket’s ‘bible’.

Clarke was Australia’s leading run scorer in last year’s Ashes with 448 runs at 64 but suffered the disappointment of finishing on the losing side as hosts England triumphed 2-1 in an intriguing series.

Clarke is joined in winning the accolade this year, an award a player can only receive once in his career and which is in the sole gift of the Wisden editor, by England Ashes heroes Stuart Broad, Graham Onions, Matt Prior and Graeme Swann.

Meanwhile India batsman Virender Sehwag becomes the first player to retain Wisden’s Leading Cricketer in the World award since it was inaugurated six years ago.

“In 2009, Sehwag broke Test cricket’s sound barrier by scoring at more than a run a ball,” explained Wisden editor Scyld Berry.

Sehwag also opens in Wisden’s 2009 Test XI, led by his India captain, MS Dhoni in a side also containing five players who featured in the 2009 Ashes.

But Australia captain Ricky Ponting, England batsman Kevin Pietersen and South Africa skipper Graeme Smith were among those dropped from the Wisden XI.

This year marks the 147th edition of Wisden which has been published continuously since 1864.

I wouldn’t have been able to sit home as captain, says Vaughan

London, Mar 26 (ANI): Former skipper Michael Vaughan has said that he could never have taken a break from the England captaincy like Andrew Strauss.

But Vaughan believes fellow Ashes-winning skipper Strauss will reclaim his authority once he returns to the dressing room.

Strauss took a rest from the recent tour to Bangladesh and England won every match under stand-in captain Alastair Cook.

“I wouldn’t have been able to sit at home as captain knowing I was fit to play. But Andrew thought he needed a break. I can understand his decision; we must look at the bigger picture,” The Sun quoted Vaughan, as saying.

“He wants to be fresh for next winter’s Ashes. If we go to Australia, win the Ashes and Straussy has a stormer, it’ll be a masterstroke,” he said.

“Straussy will be fine in the dressing room when he returns. The players are respectful of him, right behind him,” Vaughan said.

“But I’m sure he’ll get stick with the likes of Graeme Swann, Paul Collingwood and Kevin Pietersen giving him banter about picking and choosing tours,” he added. (ANI)

Free-hitting Tamim attacks England bowling

Tamim Iqbal and Mahmudullah plundered the England bowling to lead Bangladesh to 8 for 330 at close on the opening day of the second Test in Mirpur.

Off spinners Graeme Swann and James Tredwell shared five wickets between them to restore some parity as the tourists recovered from the early onslaught of Tamim, who had given them a storming start with 85 off 71 balls in the morning session.

Tamim celebrated his 21st birthday with fireworks, attacking every England bowler before debutant off spinner Tredwell had him caught by wicketkeeper Matt Prior.

The left-handed opener made his intentions clear when he got off the mark with a boundary off the first ball of the innings and completed his fifty in just 34 deliveries with three successive fours off Swann.

He blasted the next ball for a six to take 20 runs from what was Swann’s third over in the game as Bangladesh made the most of favourable batting conditions.

Tamim, who was dropped by Paul Collingwood off Tim Bresnan on 11 and by skipper Alastair Cook at mid on off Stuart Broad on 36, clubbed 13 fours and a six in his sixth Test fifty.

Broad ended a 53-run opening stand between Tamim and Imrul Kayes, with Steven Finn taking a fine diving catch to dismiss the latter for 12, but Bangladesh still raced to 95 runs in the first hour.

After Tredwell ended Tamim’s 66-run second wicket stand with Zunaed Siddique, Swann showed he had recovered from his earlier battering by trapping debutant Jahirul Islam lbw for a duck.

Swann later dismissed Zunaed lbw for 39 to give England its first success in the post-lunch session.

Finn claimed the wicket of Mahmudullah in the first ball of his second spell with Collingwood taking an easy catch at backward point.

Mahmudullah was dismissed for 59 after sharing a fifth-wicket stand of 59 with skipper Shakib Al Hasan.

Shakib fell one run short of his fifty when he was trapped lbw by Tredwell.

Vice-captain Mushfiqur Rahim took charge after Shakib’s departure and hit some beautiful shots before Bresnan had him caught behind for 30.

Swann picked up his third wicket of the day by trapping Abdur Razzak (3). Naeem Islam (33 not out) and Shafiul Islam (8 not out) were at the crease at the close.

-Reuters

Cricket is a man’s game: Pietersen

Chittagong, Mar 19(ANI): England batsman Kevin Pietersen has defended his team-mates’ aggressive approach in the first Test against Bangladesh in Chittagong, by claiming that cricket is a man’s game.

“It”s a man”s game this, it”s not a game for girls – especially when you”re playing Test match cricket. You go to the Ashes, I was christened in international cricket and believe me I got a lot worse in my first Ashes series against those Australians than anything we”ve chucked at the Bangladeshis out here,” The Telegraph quoted Pietersen, as saying.

“So I”d say it”s an absolute load of nonsense they way the boys have been made out to be because I think they”ve been brilliant. We haven”t crossed the line and I think the boys have been fantastic in everything they”ve done,” he added.

Pietersen’s comment comes after off-spinner Graeme Swann and fast bowler Stuart Broad apologised for incidents, which were believed to have overstepped the fair play line, during the series opener.

Swann was in the middle of a controversy after his gratuitous outburst against Junaid Siddique.

The Bangladeshi batsman completed his maiden Test hundred before Swann struck to swing the match in England”s favour, but on dismissing Siddique, the off-spinner raised his middle finger and roared “f*** off”, he later apologised for his behaviour.

Meanwhile, Broad attracted censure for racing the full length of the pitch in a successful search of an lbw decision against Abdur Razzak. (ANI)

England defeat Bangladesh in Chittagong Test

Chittagong (Bangladesh), Mar. 16 (ANI): England defeated Bangladesh in the first Test against Bangladesh by 181 runs, but were made to work hard on the final day.

Junaid Siddique and Mushfiqur Rahim survived unscathed until lunch, with the former bringing up his first Test century in an inspirational knock, the BBC reports.

England looked short of ideas but Graeme Swann removed the pair in quick succession after a 167-run stand. The spinner then wrapped up the win to finish with match figures of 10-217 as the hosts crumbled to 331 all out.

The victory margin was convincing from England – and Alastair Cook will be satisfied with his first Test in charge – but Bangladesh”s fight during the second half of the game made them dig deeper than they would have imagined. The efforts of Siddique and Rahim should give the home side great heart.

The defeat means Bangladesh go 1-0 down in the two-match series

England 599 for 6 dec and 209 for 7 dec beat Bangladesh 296 and 331 (Siddique 106, Rahim 95, Swann 5-127) by 181 runs (ANI)

England’s Ashes heroes angry and frustrated over playing against Ireland

London, Aug. 26 (ANI): Six of England’s Ashes-winning heroes flew to Ireland last night for a match that has left them angry and frustrated.

They believe it is ridiculous they must play a one-day international in Belfast tomorrow in the same week as their epic win over the Aussies at The Oval.

The players already have a packed schedule of two Twenty20 matches and seven one-dayers against Australia in the next three weeks.

The ECB, however, insists England must face Ireland and Scotland in alternate years to spread the cricket gospel in those countries.

Wicketkeeper Matt Prior admitted: “It’s not ideal. But the boys have got their heads around it and now we’re concentrating on the job.”

Andrew Strauss is having a break, so Paul Collingwood will captain the team. The five other travelling Oval stars are Jonathan Trott, Prior, Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann and Jimmy Anderson. (ANI)

‘Special to take final Australian wicket to clinch Ashes’ says Swann

London, Aug 25(ANI): England cricketer Graeme Swann, who took the last Australian wicket to clinch the Ashes, has said that he has never experienced anything like the surge of emotion and happiness he felt after winning the Ashes.

Swann said that he would cherish the day and the experience for rest of his life, as he has seen all the phases in his career and the experience on the final day at The Oval beats it all.

“I’ve experienced some dark days in my career when I didn’t think I’d get into my county team, let alone play for England. But, however low I felt then is not comparable to how high I have felt since we won at The Oval. I would take 364 rubbish days a year just to have one like that,” Swann wrote in The Sun.

He highlighted that it was special to take the wicket, and said that he was praying for fellow bowler Steve Harmison to miss it.

“Harmison was bowling and the crowd was going mad but deep down I was thinking, ‘Don’t get him out, I want to finish this off!’ Honestly, I wouldn’t have minded if Harmy had got it,” he added.

Swann further said that the incident was so phenomenal, that he was confusion made it hard for him to decide whether to laugh, cry or dance around.

“Paul Collingwood said to me after the game that I should cherish the moment because it might not happen again. He was right. It was the best feeling I’ve ever had playing cricket. I doubt if I’ll ever feel that good again,” he added. (ANI)

Botham drinks to dawn of great new era for English cricket

London, Aug.24 (ANI): Former England captain Ian Botham has described the Ashes series victory as a perfect pick-me-up for the country as a whole, and he is ready to drink to the dawn of great new era for English cricket.

“This Ashes win has come along to put smiles on the faces of a nation and give everybody something to be happy about at a time when there is just so much doom and gloom elsewhere,” he writes in an article for The Mirror.

“This result is enormous for English cricket and I really feel it can be the start of something special and not the end like 2005 turned out to be,” says Botham.

Coming to the Oval, he says the series was on a knife edge and that is where heroes are made and this game has created some new English stars that give us something to be very optimistic about not just now but for the future.

He also says that Stuart Broad has come of age as an England cricketer.

“Broad has really stood out. He realised that he’s not an out and out quick bowler, but someone who can nag away like a Glenn McGrath. If he can do that, he will have a great career,” Botham said.

Graeme Swann did the job he was supposed to do on a dry turning pitch by taking 4-38 and eight wickets in the match.

As for Jonathan Trott, making your debut in such a match was never going to be easy, but the way he played and handled the pressure is just what we need in our middle order and he gets a big thumbs up, said Botham.

He also praised wicketkeeper Matt Prior, “because he has got better and better as a keeper throughout the summer and he is creating an air of security behind the stumps that Alan Knott or Bob Taylor had. It is having a positive effect.”

Others coming in for praise were fast bowler Steve Harmison and captain Andrew Strauss.

He also said that England will miss the presence of all-rounder Andrew Flintoff, who he described as a “galvanising force that money just can’t buy”. (ANI)

Katich vows Aussie fight back in Oval Test

London, Aug.22 (ANI): Australian opener Simon Katich has predicted a fierce Australian fight back in the Ashes decider after England’s Stuart Broad blitzed the touring side’s batting line-up at The Oval.

Some 23 years after his father Chris batted England to victory in the 1986-87 Ashes series, Stuart put his side on track for more glory by capturing 5-19 in 47 balls in a superb 12-over spell in London.

Broad, 23, has long had the talent and pace but on Friday his execution was inch perfect as Australia’s Ashes campaign unravelled as they lost 10-87 in just under 30 overs and 138 minutes.

In response to England’s 332, Australia plunged from 0-73 to be all out for 160 with Broad’s five for 37 and spinner Graeme Swann’s four for 38 on a crumbling deck.

The home side was 3-58 in its second innings at stumps on day two, a lead of 230 runs, with Andrew Strauss (32 not out) and Jonathan Trott (8 not out) at the crease.

Katich, who top scored for the Australians with 50, told the Daily Telegraph: “We will fight hard. The game is far from over and I think that is what we showed tonight by taking three late wickets. Guys got back out there, pulled themselves up and hopefully we can have another good session in the morning and claw our way back into the game.”

“We know it is going to be hard work but that is the beauty of playing Test cricket. You don’t expect it any other way. There is the Ashes up for grabs so hopefully we can pull off something special,” he said.

He said Australia’s fourth-innings total of more than 400 in a losing effort at Lord’s last month had demonstrated the team’s fighting spirit.

He refused to blame the dusty deck for the carnage and credited Broad for turning the game.

Broad said his performance wouldn’t really count for much unless England regained the Ashes.

Any total of more than 300 in the last innings is going to be enormously challenging for Australia, especially after their third batting collapse in seven innings this series. (ANI)

Oval Test will be remembered as Flintoff’s farewell Test: Swann

London, Aug 20(ANI): England off-spinner Graeme Swann believes the fifth and final Ashes Test starting today at The Oval will be awesome, sensational, brilliant, and a match that will be remembered as Andrew Flintoff’s farewell Test.

“You name it, it will have everything. To have a chance of winning the little urn is amazing but as time goes by it will be remembered as Freddie Flintoff’s final hurrah,” Swann writes in his column for The Sun.

“The big man with the big talent and even bigger heart has done so much for English cricket. He will be missed by everyone, including the fans who have roared him on time after time after time,” he added.

Swann said that Freddie is simply an immense cricketer, who has a massive presence, and believes that it’s the size of his character which sets him apart.

“Well it’s simple. He’s a proper British bulldog, a good old-fashioned Englishman, honest as the day is long. He plays with his heart on his sleeve, gives everything. Fans can relate to that,” he said.

The 30-year-old said that Flintoff can makes things happen with bat and ball, and his services would be missed by the England team after he retires from Test cricket.

“We had a bad Test at Leeds without him and deservedly lost heavily. But, that was the last game. Fred is back and The Oval has some great memories for England. The boys like playing here and it’s all set up,” Swann added. (ANI)

Swann says England won Ashes match fair and square

London, July 14 (ANI): Off-spinner Graham Swann has said that England saved the first Ashes Test fair and square, and the Australians can talk all they like about delaying tactics.

In an article for The Sun, Swann said: ” We will go to Lord’s on Thursday with the series locked at 0-0 because of a brilliant rearguard and an amazing partnership between Jimmy Anderson and Monty Panesar.”

He admitted that the match was tough, but absolutely straight.

“No amount of complaining from the Aussies will change my mind. The fact is that confusion ruled in our dressing room in the closing stages. None of the players knew how much time or how many overs remained. When it was eventually worked out, we needed to get the message to Jimmy and Monty straight away out in the middle. That’s why our 12th man Bilal Shafayat went out with fresh gloves and a message,” Swann said.

“I’m not certain why our physio, Steve McCaig, went on to the field, but I’m sure there was a good reason,” he added.

“If Ponting believes that England overstepped the mark, he or the Aussie team management is allowed to lodge an official complaint. But they didn’t. And the umpires Aleem Dar and Billy Doctrove did not report anything to match referee Jeff Crowe, either,” said Swann.

“There is no doubt our escape has given us a lot of confidence going to Lord’s this week,” he said. (ANI)

Ashes Test: Ponting has got it right, says Benaud

Cardiff (Wales), July 12 (ANI): By closing his side’s first innings with a lead of 239, Australian captain Ricky Ponting has set his England counterpart Andrew Strauss a task that will test his leadership as well as his batting ability, feels former player and noted commentator Richie Benaud.

“I was disappointed in England’s bowling attack because I’ve been singing its praises of late.Jimmy Anderson, Stuart Broad and Andrew Flintoff were in the form of their lives and I rate Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar highly,” Benaud says in his article for News of The World.

“Neither the England off spinner nor the left hander bowled a tight line and length and their changes of pace were virtually non-existent. Ponting, Simon Katich and Michael Clarke handled them superbly, but I give top marks to Marcus North,” Benaud says.

“When Ponting was dismissed with Australia 118 behind, the chance was there for England to gain a sizeable lead – but North rebuffed them. More credit to him because he was another written off as being below Ashes standard,” he adds.

He also says that Ponting’s declaration was perfectly timed as he was keeping tabs on the weather.

He (Ponting) wanted 10 overs at England before the rain arrived. In fact he managed only seven, but it was enough to take two England wickets, Benaud says. (ANI)

England must hammer home their spin advantage during First Ashes Test: Willis

London, July 8 (ANI): Former England fast bowler Bob Willis has said that the hosts must hammer home their spin advantage in Cardiff and get their Ashes quest off to a flyer.

Willis, who claimed 325 wickets during his international career, and is now a Sky Sports expert, told Sun Sport that England can call on Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar to do the job that is expected of them, while Australia, on the other hand, have just Nathan Hauritz and part-timers Michael Clarke, Marcus North and Simon Katich.

“Australia don’t have a spinner to speak of and we have to take advantage of that. In terms of Hauritz, I think he’s hopeless. After the First Test, we may find ourselves on flatter pitches that could give us a problem taking 20 wickets. I have a slight reservation over that and fear Australia will go on from there to win the series 2-1,” Willis said.

“But then I said they’d win 3-1 in 2005. I was wrong then and I hope that’s the case again!” (ANI)

Cricket’s leading Test wicket taker Swann has forgotten how to smile

London, July 4 (ANI): England off-spinner Graeme Swann, who has emerged as the leading Test wicket-taker in the world in 2009 with 26 victims, says that he has learnt from his errors, but has lost the ability to smile along the way.

In an interview with The Sun, Swann said he was looking forward to his Ashes debut in England, and added that when he was doing the drinks for the squad in 2005, the atmosphere gave him the goose bumps.

“We weren’t meant to think or talk about the Ashes until recently but I’ve been like a kid in December opening each window in his advent calendar. I can’t wait for the big day. ne of the reasons we’re so confident of doing well is the team spirit – the England dressing room is my kind of place because of all the banter flying around. We enjoy other’s company and there are no cliques,” Swann told The Sun.
“At the age of 20, I was chosen for England’s tour of South Africa in 1999-2000, the one over-riding memory I have of that tour is frustration. I was there for three months, played only a couple of games, and wasn’t that close to anyone in the side because I didn’t know them,” said Swann.

“The tour taught me I wasn’t good enough, too immature and miles away from being an international player. After that, I disappeared from the England scene and some periods were so low that I thought about giving up,” he said.

“Moving from Northants to Notts was the turning point. I made the decision to try to improve my game and get back into the England set-up,” he added. (ANI)