Flintoff to make comeback by next month

London, June 4 (ANI): England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff, who retired from test cricket in 2009 after helping England regain the Ashes from Australia, is expected to return to action for his county club Lancashire by July or August.

Flintoff, 32, has been recuperating since undergoing reconstructive knee surgery after the final test at the Oval and is still ambitious to represent England in one-day cricket.

He had initially targeted England’s one-day series in Bangladesh in February for his comeback, but had to abandon that plan while conducting his rehabilitation in Dubai, Stuff.co.nz reports.

“Fred was with us last week and he had a long interview with Mike Watkinson (the cricket manager at Lancashire) and he said he is on course,” Lancashire chief executive Jim Cumbes told reporters.

“He is full of enthusiasm. It’s amazing that with the time he has been out he is still able to plough on. We are hoping to have him back by the end of July or start of August,” Cumbers added. (ANI)

Afridi looking to put Pakistan team back on track

Pakistan’s new Test and one-day captain, Shahid Afridi wants to root out indiscipline and infighting among his teammates in a bid to put the country’s under-achieving cricket team back on track.

Afridi said Wednesday he came out of self-imposed Test exile for the sake of Pakistan cricket and will make all efforts to lift the team out of the prevailing crisis.

‘My main task is to make a good team out of this talented bunch of players,’ he stressed. ‘I also want to promote unity and harmony among the boys because that’s the only way to get the best out of them,’ Afridi was quoted as saying in ‘The News’.

Pakistan cricket was rocked by a major controversy when the players got involved in a lot of mud-slinging during a probe conducted by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) in the aftermath of a catastrophic tour of Australia that concluded last February.

Several leading players accused each other of indiscipline during the proceedings of the probe committee after which seven of the country’s leading cricketers were slapped with strict penalties.

Afridi, 30, said as Pakistan’s new captain he would crack down on such negative behaviour.

‘I will not tolerate any sort of conspiracies in my team,’ he said. ‘I will encourage the boys to discuss their problems openly and I will ask them to bury their differences. When we leave on a tour I will ask them to leave all their problems behind and just focus on giving their best for the country.’

Afridi, who will be leading Pakistan in next month’s Asia Cup and more importantly during the challenging tour of England, made it clear that it will be a demanding task.

‘It’s a very tough task. I haven’t played Test cricket for quite some time but will have to lead the team from the front on the tour of England.

‘To play against Australia and England in English conditions would need a lot of guts. But I am hopeful that the boys will rise to the challenge.’

Afridi, however, was quick to warn his fans against raising their expectations.

‘We are good in limited-overs cricket but will take time to settle down in Tests and we need to be patient.’

However, Afridi is hopeful that a likely return of experienced players like Younis Khan and Shoaib Akhtar will boost the team’s chances in the Asia Cup and in England where his team will play back-to-back series against Australia and the hosts from July to September.

‘Younis is coming back, Shoaib is coming back and that’s going to help me a lot.’

Afridi is also optimistic that a few youngsters whom Pakistan are likely to include for the two assignments will also shine in Sri Lanka and in England.

‘Almost as important as senior players are the newcomers because they hold the key to our team’s future,’ he said. ‘We are planning to try out a few youngsters in the forthcoming events and I’m hopeful that they will not disappoint us.’

Afridi played the last of his 26 Tests almost four years back in Manchester and his critics doubt his chances of making a successful comeback in Tests.

‘I will focus on my batting and my bowling because that’s the way I can contribute properly in Tests. It won’t be easy but I’m mentally prepared to take up this challenge for the sake of the team.’

Strauss warns Eng players over match-fixing fears

With match-fixing rearing its ugly head once again, England Test captain Andrew Strauss has asked his teammates to be more vigilant and report the matter to the authorities if they come across such a situation.

“We have a duty if we hear of match fixing in domestic cricket or with England to come forward and report it straight away. For players to be tempted to take bookmakers’ money is ludicrous,” Strauss said.

Talking to reporters on the eve of his side’s first Test against England at Lord’s, Bangladesh skipper Shakib-al-Hasan also said he got a call on the eve of Bangladesh’s ODI series against Ireland in 2008, promising him sponsorship in return for under-performance.

Strauss said he himself has never come across of any match-fixing incident but stressed on the need to eradicate the menace straight away. “From my experience, I haven’t seen anything in the Middlesex dressing room or had any reason to suspect that a game I have played in has been fixed in any way. If it is happening, it needs to be stamped out straight away,” Strauss said at Lord’s.

Strauss, on his return to Test cricket, said he was excited to be back among the group again and hoping to fire with the bat.

County player approached

Meanwhile, according to The Daily Telegraph, a seasoned English county player claimed that an Indian businessman had approached him to fix one-day domestic matches, a development which sent alarms in the cricket fraternity. The report, which was published on Wednesday, said a player, who has more than 10 years’ experience in English cricket, was told by the Indian businessman to quote “his own price” and that “things are already happening in county cricket”.

The player, who remains anonymous, has reported the incident to authorities and the Professional Cricketers’ Association (PCA) would be contacting the ICC’ Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACU) on the player’s behalf, the report said. “They basically told me I could name my price for providing them with knowledge of the result of the game. They made me believe other counties are already involved,” the player was quoted as saying.

Afridi, Razzaq contemplating retiring from Test cricket ?

Lahore, May 21 (ANI): Pakistan T20 skipper Shahid Afridi along with all rounder Abdul Razzaq are reportedly planning to bid adieu to Test cricket.

According to sources, both Afridi and Razzaq, who last played an international five-day game in 2006, would meet the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ijaz Butt to convey their decision regarding retiring from Test cricket.

“They are not interested in playing Test matches any longer and just want to concentrate on extending their international careers in the one-day internationals and Twenty20 matches,” The Daily Times quoted sources, as saying.

They also said neither Afridi nor Razzaq are interested in touring England for the Test series against the hosts and Australia in July, as they want to spend their time with their families. (ANI)

Day/night Tests played in Australia or India set to be reality soon: Morgan

Sydney, May 19 (ANI): The longest version of cricket, which is facing a dearth of spectators, is all set to attract viewers in large numbers very soon with day/night Tests being played in either Australia or India.

Ever since floodlit fixtures came up in Australia more than 30 years ago as part of the rebel World Series Cricket, there have been suggestions that day/night Tests could draw in spectators who are at work during normal playing hours.

David Morgan, the president of the International Cricket Council (ICC), speaking ahead of an ICC meeting at Lord’s this week, insisted day/night Tests were on the horizon, The Sydney Morning Herald reports.

“I talked to administrators in Australia whom I expected to be so conservative as to be against day/night Test cricket but they are very much for it and I believe it won’t be too long before we see day/night Test cricket in Australia or India,” he said.

Although the ICC has introduced a Test table, its complex rating system has so far failed to excite much interest.

“Our chief executives” committee has been looking at producing a context for both ODI cricket and Test match cricket so watch this space,” said Morgan.

“Enriching ODIs and Tests are two major opportunities, and I have little or no doubt the game will embrace those fairly quickly,” he said.

Morgan added the biggest regret of his tenure, as president, which expires within weeks, was Pakistan becoming a no-go area for international cricket following the armed attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore last year. (ANI)

Smith can help Australia regain Ashes: Greg Chappell

Sydney, May 13 (ANI): Former Australian skipper Greg Chappell has said that young all-rounder Steven Smith has the talent needed to help Australia regain the Ashes, after his match winning performance in the Caribbean.

Chappell worked with Smith at Cricket Australia’s Centre of Excellence last winter and he believes his talent extends well beyond the Twenty20 arena.

Smith (20) bowled Australia into the semi-finals of the World T20 with an impressive haul of 3-20 against the West Indies in St Lucia.

Chappell predicted that Smith’s entry to Test cricket could more closely emulate that of Richie Benaud than of Shane Warne.

Smith boasts a first-class batting average of 56.22 in 13 games, which suggests that by batting in the top seven he could co-exist in the Test team with established off-spinner Nathan Hauritz, The Sydney Morning Herald reports.

“He is part of the Ashes plans in my view. In Australia, through the history of cricket, good wrist-spin bowling has been very successful and I think he has the capabilities to do that, and it gives you the opportunity to play two spinners,” Chappell said.

“Remember that Richie Benaud played for three or four years as a batsman predominantly, and bowled the odd over here or there. I can see Steve Smith doing that in the early days of his career,” Chappell added.

Chappell has encouraged Smith to develop all facets of his game rather than concentrate on one or the other, and regards him as precisely the kind of cricketer the selectors should promote across all formats. (ANI)

Australia hopes to face England in World Twenty20 final

Sydney, May 13 (ANI): Australian skipper Michael Clarke has said the team is focused for the semi-final encounter against Pakistan and is hoping to face England in Sunday’s World Twenty20 final, which would be a good start for the Ashes series to be held later in the year.

The two old rivals face tough matches in their semi-finals, with Australia taking on defending champions Pakistan in St Lucia on Friday and England playing Sri Lanka on Thursday.

“I’d look forward to that, yeah. If we beat Pakistan and meet England in the final, it would be a good start to what is going to be a very good and interesting summer back in Australia as well with the Ashes,” Clarke said.

“For me, right now, I’ve got both eyes on Pakistan, and I’ll worry about everything else after that. We didn’t come here to make the semi-finals,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted him, as saying.

Clarke said his side is more motivated by the fact that the World T20 Cup is Australia’s missing link, having dominated Test cricket for more than a decade and won four one-day international World Cups, including the past three.

“No doubt, it has motivated every player, not just throughout this tournament but throughout the last 12 months,” said Clarke.

“We’ve certainly improved over the last 12 months. But again it’s important that you stay focused. We need to understand that what we’ve done in this tournament so far right now is irrelevant. We need to beat Pakistan in this game on Friday. Beating them a week ago is irrelevant,” he added.

Australia was semi-finalists in the inaugural World T20 in 2007 and first-round losers in 2009, meaning they were not among the eight seeds for the Caribbean event.

“We’ve come into this tournament ranked very low and our performances have been outstanding,” Clarke said. (ANI)

Nannes happy to cash in on T20 riches up for grabs

Sydney, May 8 (ANI): Leading wicket taker in the Twenty20 World Cup, Dirk Nannes, has said that Australian cricketers who no longer are in contention for Test and Sheffield Shield selection should cash in on the T20 riches on offer.

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He, however added that young players should persist with goals to wear the baggy green.

“It would be disturbing if the younger blokes did it, (but) I see it certainly as a good option for people getting close to the end of their career who no longer see themselves as a fixture in the longer forms,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Nannes, as saying.

Nannes, a Twenty20 specialist who retired from first-class cricket last season, said: “It would be a worry if it happened at a younger age. Everyone says David Warner is a Twenty20 specialist. It would be wrong for someone like that to just be a Twenty20 cricketer.

“He’s got so much of his game to develop. There’s no reason he can’t play Test cricket and be a good player over a long period of time. People like that would be making the wrong decision. What happens if the IPL falls over? Who knows?”

“For someone who is on the outer of Test cricket, why not make the right business move and play the shorter form? You have to get out of cricket what you can, if you strip the emotion away,” he said.

The most unlikely of Australian cricketers, Nannes, after only nine internationals, T20s has become a key member of the team’s World Twenty20 campaign.

“I’d always play a couple of games (of cricket) before and after I went skiing. Skiing was December until the end of February,” said Nannes, who always wanted to be a skiier or a musician, a sax player.

“I don’t know how it happened. It was funny. It wasn’t like everyone else who has come through the representative system. I had never played a representative game until I played for Victoria and I never really actually wanted to be a cricketer. I had just played cricket in the backyard with my brother,” he added.

Nannes said he has had no more than 10 coaching lessons on his bowling action through his career, and yet has become one of the most potent short-form bowlers in the world. (ANI)

Twenty20 as serious as Test cricket, asserts Clarke

Sydney, April 29 (IANS) Australia’s Twenty20 captain Michael Clarke Thursday called Twenty20 as important as Test cricket and has asked Cricket Australia (CA) to include Twenty20 specialists like batsmen David Warner and David Hussey in their contract system.

‘It’s the same – it’s exactly the same,’ Clarke was quoted as saying in Daily Telegraph as Australia prepares for the World Twenty20, beginning Friday, in the Caribbean.

‘For me, it’s as serious as a one-day match or a Test match.’

‘There are blokes in this squad who haven’t played Test cricket. They haven’t played one-day cricket. It’s the ultimate for them.’

‘It’s become exactly the same as one-day and Test cricket. It’s a form of the game that we want to be the best in the world at. We’re not there yet, we’re improving, but this is a way for us to start.’

Clarke’s remarks are not likely to go well with the purists but he believes it has a growing relevance among the players.

‘There’s no such thing as a game of hit and giggle,’ he said. ‘That’s something that has changed. It used to be about putting on a show, entertaining the crowd.’

‘But from a player point of view, that is no longer the case.’

Clarke revealed he had approached CA executives about changing its contract.

‘I’ve told Cricket Australia that they should have contracts,’ he said. ‘I think there should be a Twenty20 contract introduced.’

‘I know once you play a certain number of Twenty20 games, you can get upgraded to a Cricket Australia contract.’

‘But players like David Warner and David Hussey … they’re here playing in a Twenty20 World Cup. They should be paid (under contract) for that.’

‘Shattered’ Lee vows to play on despite latest injury setback

St. Lucia, Apr 30(ANI): Australian fast bowler Brett Lee has been shattered by his latest injury setback, but he is determined to play on and force his way back into the national one-day side for the July tour against Pakistan in England.

Lee sustained a muscle strain in his right forearm during the warm up game against Zimbabwe, which has ruled him out of the Twenty20 World Cup and also raised doubts over his international career

However, Lee’s manager, Neil Maxwell, said the 33-year-old fast bowler was not considering international retirement following his fifth notable injury in the past 16 months.

“I don’t think that he is at that mindset at the moment,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Maxwell, as saying.

“There is no doubt this is the home straight [of his career], but he knows that last October-November he was playing the best cricket of his career,” he added.

Teammate Nathan Hauritz is also confident that Lee would be able to make recover fully and make a strong comeback.

“Knowing Brett the way I do, he’ll work hard because he still wants to play a lot of cricket. He’ll have to do a lot of work,” he added.

Earlier, Australian team physiotherapist Alex Kountouris had said that the injury was unrelated to Lee’s career-threatening surgery on the same elbow late last year, and said the fast bowler could be back in action within five weeks.

“I think as a long-term injury it shouldn”t be that serious. It’s basically a strain on his forearm muscle just on the inside of his elbow. We don”t see a lot of them. His long-term future is not the problem,” Kountouris said.

“The issue now is whether Lee can summon the mental strength for yet another comeback for a body that keeps asking: when is enough enough?” he added.

The 33-year-old Lee, who has also battled foot, ankle and rib problems, had retired from Test cricket in February to prolong his career in the shorter forms of the game. (ANI)

Lee ‘gutted’ by injury blow: Oz team physio

St. Lucia, Apr 29(ANI): Australian team physiotherapist Alex Kountouris has said that fast bowler Brett Lee is “gutted” by his latest injury, which has ruled him out of the Twenty20 World Cup and also raises doubts over his international career.

Lee sustained a muscle strain in his right forearm during the warm up game against Zimbabwe.

“He was very disappointed – gutted. It would be very, very hard I would imagine. In the last 12 months he has hardly played and he has had four different injuries,” The Herald Sun quoted Kountouris, as saying.

“He had ankle surgery early last year, he had that side strain in England, and then he got that elbow injury after that. One is sort of a consequence of another,” he added.

Kountouris maintained the injury is unrelated to Lee’s career-threatening surgery on the same elbow late last year, and said the fast bowler could be back in action within five weeks.

“I think as a long-term injury it shouldn’t be that serious. It’s basically a strain on his forearm muscle just on the inside of his elbow. We don’t see a lot of them. His long-term future is not the problem,” Kountouris said.

“The issue now is whether Lee can summon the mental strength for yet another comeback for a body that keeps asking: when is enough enough?” he added.

The 33-year-old Lee, who has also battled foot, ankle and rib problems, had retired from Test cricket in February to prolong his career in the shorter forms of the game. (ANI)

Twenty20 seriousness on par with one-day cricket, Tests: Clarke

St. Lucia, Apr 29(ANI): Australian skipper Michael Clarke has made an astonishing claim that Twenty20 cricket has the same status as one-day and Test cricket.

“It’s the same – it’s exactly the same. For me, it’s as serious as a one-day match or a Test match. There are blokes in this squad who haven’t played Test cricket. They haven’t played one-day cricket. It’s the ultimate for them,” the Fox News quoted Clarke, as saying.

“It’s become exactly the same as one-day and Test cricket. It’s a form of the game that we want to be the best in the world at. We’re not there yet, we’re improving, but this is a way for us to start,” he added.

The 29-year-old further said that from a player’s point of view the shortest version of the game is no more a marketing vehicle to swell audiences and attract new fans.

“There’s no such thing as a game of hit and giggle. That’s something that has changed. It used to be about putting on a show, entertaining the crowd. But from a player point of view, that is no longer the case,” Clarke said.

Clarke also revealed that he has approached the Cricket Australia (CA) management over altering its contract system to include Twenty20 specialists.

“I’ve told Cricket Australia that they should have contracts. I think there should be a Twenty20 contract introduced. I know once you play a certain number of Twenty20 games you can get upgraded to a Cricket Australia contract,” he said. (ANI)

Rebuilding career, Test spot my ultimate goal: David Hussey

St. Lucia, Apr 28(ANI): Australian batsman David Hussey insists that losing his Cricket Australia (CA) contract was a “kick in the teeth”, and said he does face the task of rebuilding his career.

Hussey will be making a comeback in the Twenty 20 World Cup, starting from April 30.

“I look at it as a way to get back into the one-day team and hopefully, longer down the track, a Test spot,” the Fox Sports quoted Hussey, as saying.

“That’s my ultimate goal. I think they (selectors) know what I can do,” he added.

The 32-year-old further admitted that he would be lying if he said he had not considered retiring from first-class cricket and focusing on the Twenty20 leagues in India and England.

“They are options, but I still believe I have a big future in one-day cricket for Australia. I desperately want to play Test cricket,” Hussey said.

“I thought I did reasonably well in domestic cricket and to not get selected in the first 25 was very disappointing, but I’m here now. I’ve got an opportunity to represent Australia in a (Twenty20) World Cup in the West Indies so things can”t be too bad,” he added. (ANI)

Injured Lee likely to be ruled out of T20 World Cup

St. Lucia, Apr 28(ANI): Australian fast bowler Brett Lee is likely to be ruled out of the Twenty20 World Cup after sustaining a muscle strain in his right forearm during the warm up game against Zimbabwe.

Lee complained of a muscle strain in the same spot of the right elbow that required surgery in December last year and hastened his retirement from Test cricket in February.

He took 1 for 13 in four overs in the match at Beausejour Cricket Ground, and later underwent MRI scans to determine the seriousness of the strain.

Australian physio Alex Kontouris, however was adamant that the injury was unrelated to Lee’s elbow surgery, Fox Sports reports.

The Australian team management has already put in a request to the International Cricket Council to see if they can replace the injured fast bowler.

While no names have been mentioned, fellow fast bowlers Doug Bollinger and Ryan Harris are being considered as the logical choice. (ANI)

Australia ready to replicate season’s success in T20 World Cup: Clarke

Sydney, Apr 24(ANI): Australian Twenty20 skipper Michael Clarke has said his squad is ready to replicate the national team’s successful season so far and win the Twenty20 World Cup in the West Indies.

“I think our form over the last 12 months has been very good, very exciting. We have a specialist Twenty20 squad now,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Clarke, as saying.

“There are no guarantees in this game, but with the talent we have in this squad I don’t see any reason why we can’t be as successful as we have been in one-day and Test cricket,” he added.

Clarke further believes the team is balanced enough to adapt to the challenging conditions in the Caribbean.

“Our squad is very adaptable not just with the ball, but with the bat as well,” Clarke said.

“We’ve got two spinners in our squad, a couple of part-time spinners, two all-rounders and four very good fast bowlers,” he added.

The 29-year-old, who is relatively inexperienced in the shortest version of the game, said he has been trying to gather suggestions to be a successful captain in the Twenty20s.

“I’ve had a lot of conversations with guys who have been playing in the Indian Premier League (IPL) and I’ve got a lot of advice from those guys as well,” he added. (ANI)

Kieswetter admits eyeing Prior”s Test place

London, Apr 17 (ANI): Somerset wicketkeeper Craig Kieswetter has admitted that he is now eyeing Matt Prior”s Test place after forcing him out of the World Twenty20 England squad.

Kieswetter praised his rival, and said that their battle for the wicket keeping slot will only benefit the England side.

Kieswetter is a star in the making, having scored a maiden one-day century in just his third international during the tour of Bangladesh.

Prior remains England”s first-choice stumper for one-day and Test cricket, but will now have to score some serious runs to keep Kieswetter at bay, The Sun reports.

“Matt is a really cool bloke and was so welcoming and friendly to me when I came into the squad in Bangladesh. We trained hard together and showed we can play in the same one-day side,” he said.

“I may have got the Twenty20 place but we”re both professionals and don”t take selection personally, whichever way it works out. Obviously long term Test cricket is a goal, but Matt has the gloves there and in the one-dayers,” Kieswetter said.

“So for me it”s just a case of playing as hard as I can in anticipation of an opportunity,” he added.

Kieswetter”s big break came in Abu Dhabi, where as part of the England Lions side he helped defeat the first team at T20. (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.

MCC to sponsor Pakistan-Australia Tests

Marylebone Cricket Club has announced it will be sponsoring the Test and one-day series between Pakistan and Australia in England in July.

This will be the first time MCC, the owners of London Lord’s Cricket Ground where the first of two Tests between Pakistan and Australia is due to start on July 13, has sponsored an international series in its 223-year history.

The series comes at a time when Pakistan, who will also be playing a Test and one-day series against England this English season, has become a no-go area for international cricket following a terror attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore last year.

MCC’s Australian secretary, Keith Bradshaw, told a news conference in the Long Room of the Lord’s Pavilion: “MCC is committed to the health of Test cricket, and by sponsoring the series and hosting the first Test, the club is supporting Pakistani cricket at a time when the country’s Test calendar has been decimated.

“We often speak about Tests being the pinnacle of the game – now we are acting to back up those words,” the former Tasmania batsman said.

Bradshaw refused to divulge how much money MCC was putting into the series, which also features a Test at Yorkshire’s Headingley ground in Leeds, citing “commercial confidentiality”, but insisted it was a “not for profit exercise” as far as his club was concerned.

“We feel we are independent and to some extent the conscience of the game,” Bradshaw said of MCC, which is still responsible for overseeing the game’s Laws or rules.

“We are very thrilled Pakistan are coming here to play at the ‘home of cricket’.”

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) director of cricket operations Zakir Khan said: “We thank the ECB (England and Wales Cricket Board) and Cricket Australia for helping us out and making this Test and T20 series in England happen.

“We are also very thankful to MCC. When you are not playing your home series at home, it’s very difficult.

“Cricket is still very much at the same level, we have youngsters coming through. The passion is there, that will never die down.”

It is nearly a century since Lord’s staged a neutral Test, during the 1912 triangular series involving England, Australia and South Africa.

Two Australian batsman, Warren Bardsley and Charlie Kelleway, scored Test centuries against South Africa at Lord’s that year but their achievements were not marked on the ground’s dressing room honours board.

That was rectified on Monday with the unveiling of a new honours board specially created for neutral Tests.

MCC is keen to stage more such matches at Lord’s, at a time when Test cricket outside of England is struggling to attract crowds, and Bradshaw said: “The last neutral Test was played here in 1912 and I hope we don’t have to wait the best part of a century to play another one.”

Selectors take ‘leap of faith’ on Lee

Brett Lee will need to lift himself dramatically if he wishes to be anything more than a net bowler in Australia’s World Twenty20 campaign next month.

Three matches into his return with Indian Premier League side King’s XI Punjab and Lee’s figures read an unflattering 0-111 from 10.3 overs.

National chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch admits his panel were flying blind when they chose 33-year-old Lee for the tournament without watching him bowl, and on current form he seems likely to be on the plane only as an ageing squad player and mentor to the rest of the attack.

“That’s the risk we took when we picked him, we knew at the time of that selection that there were about five weeks to go before the World Cup, which was a lot of preparation time,” Hilditch said Wednesday.

“It would’ve been better for us when we picked him in the T20 World Cup that he’d played more cricket but it is what it is.

“He’s coming back through the IPL and we’re trusting he’s going to be right for the World Cup.

“We’re obviously watching it but we’re expecting that he’s going to take some time.

“He’s not having any elbow pain and seems to have made a good recovery from the injury, so I think it’s just a matter of getting more match practice.”

Nevertheless, Lee was named as one of CA’s 25 centrally-contracted players on Wednesday, and Hilditch said he still held out hope that the 33-year-old still had a place in the limited overs set-up.

He has already retired from Test cricket following the setback of an elbow ailment that kept him out of the whole of the home summer.

Hilditch described his perseverance with Lee as a “leap of faith” but one worth taking given the fast bowler’s decorated record in limited overs cricket and with the 2011 50-over World Cup on the horizon.

“Brett at his best is certainly still in our thoughts for 50-over and T20 cricket,” he said.

“We’re hoping he will make the recovery we expect and still playing IPL and getting back to his best.

“So I suppose it is a leap of faith, but a leap of faith in a player who’s taken 300-odd Test wickets and been one of our best, so we’re giving him that opportunity.”

Summer sweep confirms Aussies ready for Ashes triumph: Ponting

Hamilton, Apr 1(ANI): Australia skipper Ricky Ponting has said that the series win over New Zealand had erased all the doubts raised about his side ahead of the Ashes series later this year.

Australia wrapped up the series 2-0 by defeating New Zealand in the Hamilton Test by 176 runs.

The visitors had won the first Test in Wellington by ten wickets, and having defeated West Indies 2-0 and Pakistan 3-0 on home soil, the Australian team finished the summer season unbeaten in Tests.

“There were probably some question marks over our Test cricket before the summer started; being a little bit inconsistent through the Ashes series and probably playing well enough at different times to have won that series, but not being able to nail the crucial moments,” Fox Sports quoted Ponting, as saying.

“If anything this year we”ve probably gone the other way, when there”s been big moments we really have stood up and nailed them. We can”t be any better placed at the moment, we have two Tests to play in England (against Pakistan) then it”s straight into it,” he added.

Ponting further said that the current group of players are going strong at the moment, and they can “put up a very good show in the Ashes.”

“There will be no excuses from where we are sitting. We”ve done everything we would have liked for us to have achieved throughout the summer. There”s never been a game that has dragged on. Hopefully, we have a full complement of players to pick from going into November,” Ponting said.

“Generally when you get a bit tired teams can fade away, but I think if anything we”ve got better and stronger as a group as the year has gone on. I”m really happy with what we”ve achieved,” he added. (ANI)