Sunday, 11 September 2016

Former England bowler

Higgs, who played Test cricket for England between 1965 and 1968, took 71 scalps at an average of 20.74 from just 15 games.
Though he played only 15 Tests for England, Higgs was a stalwart at the domestic level for both Lancashire and Leicestershire, taking 1536 wickets from 511 matches at an average of 23.61.
In his brief international career, Higgs caused trouble for many accomplished batsmen of his time with accuracy and his ability to swing the ball.
After initially retiring from county cricket in 1969, Higgs made a comeback for Leicestershire and went on to play till 1986.
A widely respected bowler in all circles of the game, Higgs also took 355 List A wickets from 246 matches at an excellent average of 18.96.
Both Lancashire and Leicestershire expressed sadness at the passing away of Higgs and expressed their condolences.
A statement from Lancashire said, “We are very sad to hear of the passing of former Lancashire bowler Ken Higgs. Our thoughts are with his family at this time.”
“Leicestershire County Cricket Club is extremely saddened to learn of the passing of the great fast-medium opening bowler Ken Higgs,” read a statement from Leicestershire.
Chairman of Leicestershire, Paul Haywood offered condolences to Higgs’ family and recollected the times they played together.
“I had the great pleasure of playing alongside Ken, and he was a truly great bowler who had a wonderful career record.
“Ken was well respected by everyone at Leicestershire County Cricket Club, and we would like to offer our condolences and best wishes to his family.”
As a sign of respect for Higgs from Lancashire and Leicestershire flags at Grace Road and at Old Trafford were flying at half-mast.
© Cricket World 2016
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Pakistan trounce England with nine-wicket victory

After a disciplined bowling performance from Pakistan restricted England to 135 for seven, fifties from Sharjeel Khan and Khalid Latif steered the visitors to a convincing nine-wicket victory in the only Twenty20 International between the two sides at Old Trafford.
England won the toss and elected to bat first. After a couple of quiet overs, Alex Hales (37) and Jason Roy (21) scored seven boundaries and a six combined to bring the 50-run opening stand at the end of the sixth over.
Imad Wasim (2-17) provided the initial breakthrough for Pakistan after he trapped Roy LBW in the seventh over and two overs later he castled Hales as well.
The wickets continued to tumble as Joe Root (6) steered a Hasan Ali (2-24) delivery to third man. At the half-way stage, England were 77 for three.
In the next five overs, England managed to score just 28 runs while losing the wickets of Jos Buttler (16) and Ben Stokes (4).
The late flourish England were hoping did not arrive and they were eventually restricted to 135 for seven with Wahab Riaz (3-18) being the pick of the bowlers.
Pakistan openers Khan (59) and Latif (59 not out) started the innings aggressively as they smashed 14 boundaries and a six between them to take the total to 73 for naught at the end of the powerplay. The onslaught from the opening pair also brought down the required-run-rate under five.
With a couple more sixes in the eighth over, Khan completed a 30-ball fifty and soon brought the 100-run stand with Latif in the 10th over.
Adil Rashid (1-29) deceived Khan in the 12th over after he was caught in the covers ending the 107-run opening stand which came in just 67 deliveries.
Just like his opening partner, Latif reached his half-century with a six as he along with Babar Azam (15 not out) ensured Pakistan reached the target with nine wickets in hand to win the lone T20I. Riaz was awarded the man of the match for his three-wicket haul.
© Cricket World 2016
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The England tour

Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Irfan is set to return home after suffering from cramps in the fourth One-Day International against England and will take no further part in the remainder of the series.
According to a statement from the Pakistan Cricket Board, Irfan suffered cramps in his hamstring but they later spread to his calves and hence he is being sent back home to improve his fitness.
Irfan bowled a five-over spell at the start and accounted for both the England openers but had to spend time off the field.
When he returned in the 42nd over in an attempt to bowl a second spell, he managed to bowl just one wide and walked off the field.
Pakistan bowling coach Azhar Mahmood said that though the team management was unhappy with Irfan’s fitness, he acknowledged that the height of the 34-year-old posed a unique set of challenges.
“Definitely Mickey was unhappy and as bowling coach I was unhappy as well. We had a chance to win that game the other day,” Mahmood said.
“Unfortunately, everyone gets cramp. He is a big guy and his body is totally different to a normal human. But he got cramps.”
The Pakistan selectors have drafted fast bowler Hasan Ali to replace Irfan in the squad for the lone Twenty20 International to be played at Old Trafford on 7th September.
© Cricket World 2016
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England and Australia strengthen ODI rankings

England and Australia have increased their hold on their respective positions in the International Cricket Council (ICC) One-Day International Team Rankings after comprehensive wins against Pakistan and Sri Lanka respectively.
Australia’s 4-1 series win has seen them gain one point and they are now placed on 124 rating points while Sri Lanka has lost one point but have maintained their sixth spot.
Sri Lanka currently have 101 points but their lead against the seventh-placed Bangladesh is only a slender margin of three points.
England, who also have secured a 4-1 series win against Pakistan, have gained one point and are now on 107 rating points, three adrift from South Africa (fourth spot) and India (third spot), who are tied on 110 points.
The series defeat against England has led to Pakistan falling to 86 points, which is their lowest ever since the rankings system was introduced in the year 2001.
Currently, Pakistan lag behind the eighth-placed West Indies by eight points, making it an uphill task for them to break into the top eight to secure a direct qualification for the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup.
Given that Pakistan’s upcoming ODI contests are against West Indies and the top-ranked Australia, they have a tough task ahead of them to climb up the points table.
For the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup, England and the other top seven ranked sides will qualify directly while the other two teams will take part in the 2018 Cricket World Cup qualifier.
© Cricket World 2016
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called up to ODI squad against Pakistan

West Indies have called up opening batsman Kraigg Brathwaite and fast bowler Alzarri Joseph to the One-Day International squad to face Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates later this month.
Both Brathwaite and Joseph are uncapped in the ODI format along with Evin Lewis, who is also named in the 15-man squad.
Missing out on selection for the ODIs are Andre Fletcher and Jerome Taylor, while players like Samuel Badree, Dwayne Bravo, Chris Gayle and Darren Sammy were ineligible for selection as they have not participated in the 50-over domestic tournament last season.
Meanwhile, West Indies have also named the Twenty20 International squad for their tour of the UAE and two uncapped players – Nicholas Pooran and Rovman Powell – are called up to the side.
Jerome Taylor and Chadwick Walton are also included while Chris Gayle misses out after making himself unavailable for selection.
Lendl Simmons was also unavailable due to medical reasons and former skipper Sammy continues to remain on the sidelines.
Walton and Powell impressed for the Jamaica Tallawahs in the 2016 edition of the Caribbean Premier League scoring 301 and 228 runs respectively.
In their tour of the UAE, West Indies will play three T20Is, three ODIs and as many Test matches between 23rd September and 3rd November.
West Indies ODI squad: Jason Holder (capt), Sulieman Benn, Carlos Brathwaite, Kraigg Brathwaite, Darren Bravo, Jonathan Carter, Johnson Charles, Shannon Gabriel, Alzarri Joseph, Evin Lewis, Sunil Narine, Ashley Nurse, Kieron Pollard, Denesh Ramdin, Marlon Samuels
West Indies T20I squad: Carlos Brathwaite (capt), Samuel Badree, Dwayne Bravo, Johnson Charles, Andre Fletcher, Jason Holder, Evin Lewis, Sunil Narine, Kieron Pollard, Nicholas Pooran, Rovman Powell, Andre Russell, Marlon Samuels, Jerome Taylor, Chadwick Walton
© Cricket World 2016
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Pakistan to be presented with ICC Test Championship Mace in Lahore

The International Cricket Council (ICC) will present Pakistan with the Test Championship Mace on 21st September to the Test team captain Misbah-ul-Haq at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore.
Recently after their 2-2 draw with England in the Test series, Pakistan ascended to the number two position in the ICC Test team rankings.
However, after India failed to win their series against West Indies 3-0, Pakistan ascended to the number one position for the first time since the rankings were introduced in 2003.
In a press release, the ICC announced that the chief executive of the global body, David Richardson, will hand over the mace to Misbah.
“The International Cricket Council (ICC) will present the ICC Test Championship mace to Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore on Wednesday, 21 September, it was announced today.
“ICC Chief Executive David Richardson will make the presentation at 10h30 (PST), which will be followed by a media conference at 11h00 (PST).”
Currently, Pakistan have 111 rating points and have a slender one-point lead over the second placed India.
© Cricket World 2016
- See more at: http://www.cricketworld.com/pakistan-to-be-presented-with-icc-test-championship-mace-in-lahore/46153.htm#sthash.9eYWZWjT.dpuf






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Post are from http://sports.ndtv.com,http://www.cricketworld.com// and  http://www.espncricinfo. com/

New Zealand Coach Mike Hesson Mulls Combination Ahead Of India Series

"Seamers if anything might bowl two-three overs up front and it's more likely they're going to have spin at one end to start with if they're going to play three of them. And if you've got two left-handers against Ashwin at the top it's going to be a big challenge for us. We have to assess conditions and pick what we think is the right mix," Hesson was quoted as saying by 'stuff.co.nz'.
Ahead of one of his toughest assignments, the 41-year-old praised his young spin bowling unit that is expected to play a crucial role in India.
"They're a young spin-bowling group. Probably Ish and Mitch have found white-ball cricket a little easier than Test cricket," Hesson said. "They're both evolving nicely and it's about giving them opportunity.
"I've been really pleased with the way Mark Craig has come back from last season. He's made a few changes technically and the ball seems to be coming out really nicely."
New Zealand will play a three-day tour match against Mumbai in Delhi between September 16 and 18, before the first Test in Kanpur. The second and third Tests will be played in Kolkata and Indore from September 30 and October 8 respectively.
Hesson said wicketkeeper-batsman Luke Ronchi could be one of the contenders for a place in the XI as the side looks for an opening batsman who can combat spin.
New Zealand's regular opening pair is Martin Guptill and Tom Latham.
In the only Test he played against England at Headingley last year, Ronchi slammed a 70-ball 88.
"It's not your traditional New Zealand opener that you require over there; you need guys who can score against spin, find ways to rotate the strike and keep the game moving," Hesson said.

Yorkshire appetites whetted after Sidebottom's four

 Adil Rashid, Liam Plunkett and David Willey are about to be released from England duties. Only Rashid can be confident of a game next week. Steve Patterson must contend with personal issues. He had left the match for much of the third day - his captain, Gale, confirmed - because his father is seriously ill.
The final day belonged more than anybody to Ryan Sidebottom. He spent two months in pot in the first half of the season after suffering a hairline fracture of his ankle during a football keepy-uppy game. As far as cricket is concerned, his ambitions stretch more to winny-winny than keepy-uppy, and four cheap wickets, including a burst of 3 for 9 in 18 balls, swept aside Durham's resistance.
Durham were vulnerable when they resumed on 39 for 3, a target of 421 beyond the horizon. Less than nine overs into the day, they were 63 for 6 and Sidebottom had taken all of them, claiming the nightwatchman Graham Onions at cover, silencing Scott Borthwick with a stone-dead lbw and winning a second leg-before decision when Paul Collingwood fatally played no shot.

Watch: Jamaica goes crazy as Usain Bolt targets Olympic immortality with another 100m win


Rio de Janeiro: Usain Bolt declared that he is confident of becoming an "immortal" by the end of the Rio Olympic Games 2016. Following another sensational performance in the 100m dash, where the Jamaican surged past American rival Justin Gatlin to take the most prized Olympic gold in 9.81 seconds.
With one title in the bag, Bolt celebrated and turned his attention to completing the 100m, 200m and 4x100m gold medal sweep at three consecutive Olympics. "Somebody said I can become immortal. Two more medals to go and I can sign off. Immortal," said Bolt who has said this will be his last Olympics.
Bolt said he had been "shocked" at the booing directed at Gatlin, who has twiced been banned for doping, but insisted he had focused on the victory that left him out alone in the 120-year history of Olympic sprinting.
Although way short of his 9.58sec world record, Bolt was happy with the performance. He started slowly but reeled in the fast-starting Gatlin within 70 metres and eased up, thumping his chest as he crossed the line. Canada's Andre de Grasse took bronze. "It was brilliant. I didn't go so fast but I'm so happy I won," he said.
Meanwhile, back home in Jamaica, traffic came to a standstill and thousands stood in muddy puddles after a heavy storm, but Usain Bolt had won so it was time to party.
The national green and yellow colours dominated streets as people poured out to watch the Rio Olympics 100m on giant screens. It was cool and there was a slight drizzle, but nothing could put a damper on the island's festivities.
As Bolt struck his familiar lightning pose, Jamaicans blew whistles and horns and banged metal pot covers. They gathered in towns centres like Half Way Tree in Kingston, Sam Sharpe Square in Montego Bay and Falmouth, near where Bolt was born and developed as a runner into the global star.
Traffic halted in Sam Sharpe Square with spectators standing in puddles of water left from a heavy afternoon shower, without even seeming to notice, as they stretched to see a giant screen on the side of a building. "The greatest ever," said one man, who gave his name as Charlie. "He is the best. He can't stop running now, he must go on."
With tears running down her face, Sonia Brown, a hotel worker from the neighbouring Hanover parish, was still dressed in her uniform. She chanted "Usain, Usain, Usain" while intermittently blowing on a long red plastic Vuvuzela horn.
Strangers hugged and celebrated and not a single person admitted they had any doubts he would win.
But there was a collective gasp as he came out of the blocks behind American rival Justin Gatlin. By the time Bolt had caught the field at the midpoint, the cheering had started and by the time he crossed the line, the party was in full swing.
"Jamaica is the land of speed, we have the fastest man and woman in the world," Shiela Paul said. "We are going to win the two 200m and the two relays as well."
Some Jamaicans though are hard to please. Joel Clarke, who said he raced against Bolt in high school, said his only disappointment was that Bolt did not go lower. "I think he could have run faster, his start was poor and he slowed down at the end, but a gold is a gold, I am good with that."
Clarke thinks the 200m will be easier for Bolt. "That’s his race, he will go hard there, it won't be close."
Eric Jones from Trelawny, Bolt's hometown, said, "I felt like I was there, in Brazil. I did not want to take a taxi home and miss the race and I am glad I came here tonight to see history."
While there were commiserations for Yohan Blake, who finished fourth and just missed a medal, there were no sympathies for American Justin Gatlin who has served two doping bans. "Gatlin should retire now, he can't beat Bolt, he only talks," said Sydney Clarke, as he celebrated with a woman friend. "Gatlin can't back up his chat. Bolt will beat him every time no matter where they put the race."

Bari replaces Alam as Pakistan team manager

Pakistan have appointed the former wicketkeeper-batsman Wasim Bariteam manager for their upcoming series against West Indies in the UAE. Bari will replace Intikhab Alam, whose contract with the PCB is set to expire this month.
"Intikhab Alam's contract with PCB as team manager is concluding this month," the PCB said in a statement. "PCB would like to express its thanks and appreciation to Mr. Alam for his contribution to the Pakistan cricket team. The team has received a lot of plaudits for their conduct on the recent tour of England and were appreciated as positive ambassadors of their country. Mr. Alam's role as head of the Pakistan contingent was key to the PCB's efforts to ensure an incident-free tour of England."
The decision not to extend Alam's contract, ESPNcricinfo understands, was taken midway through the England tour, as the result of a controversial decision he took. Alam allowed the family of bowling coach Mushtaq Ahmed to reside in the middle-order batsman Ifthikhar Ahmed's room during the Test series, forcing the player to share a room with Mohammad Rizwan. The incident was a direct violation of the code of conduct, with Alam found to be lenient in enforcing the code. The tour otherwise was a success unlike some previous tours of England.
Bari played 81 Tests and finished with 228 dismissals, the most by a Pakistan wicketkeeper. He captained Pakistan in six Tests - the drawn home series against England in 1977-78 and the tour of England in 1978, which Pakistan lost 2-0. Like Alam, he has been a significant figure in Pakistan cricket, serving as player, captain, chief selector, director of the PCB's human resource and education departments, and imparting anti-corruption training. He also served a stint as the chief operating officer of the PCB, the second-highest post behind only the chairman.
Alam has been involved with Pakistan cricket through most of the last six decades. He made his Test debut in 1959 against Australia in Karachi, and played 47 Tests in all in a career that stretched until 1977. He captained Pakistan in 17 Test matches, and after his playing career served as manager, selector, coach - helping Pakistan to a World Cup title in 1992 and a World T20 triumph in 2009 - and as director of the National Cricket Academy and the PCB's director of international operations.

Pujara ton leaves India Blue in command

After India Blue opted to bat first on a dry and cracked Greater Noida surface, Cheteshwar Pujara's fluent unbeaten 111 and Gautam Gambhir's well-compiled 94 studded a dominant batting display over an India Red attack that lacked penetration and consistency.
Gambhir, who registered his fourth consecutive fifty-plus score of the tournament, also brought up his fourth consecutive century opening stand with Mayank Agarwal, who scored 57 in a knock laced with fluent cover drives. Pujara, coming off an innings of 166 against India Green, built on that base, scoring at a strike rate of 67.68 against a tiring and deflated bowling attack.
India Blue made hay after the sun went down, plundering 151 runs in the third session for the sole loss of Rohit Sharma. Pujara and Dinesh Karthik made the bulk of those runs in an unbroken fourth-wicket stand of 120 off 23.3 overs, which thoroughly entertained the sizeable crowd and took India Blue to an imposing 362 for 3 by stumps.
If winning the toss was a slice of luck for India Blue, their openers benefited from a few more fortunate moments during their 144-run stand. Left-arm wristspinner Kuldeep Yadav, introduced in the 15th over, produced a chance with his first ball when Gambhir defended a good-length delivery to silly point, who couldn't hold on to a low catch. A little later, Kuldeep beat a charging Agarwal but wicketkeeper Ankush Bains failed to collect the ball cleanly to complete the stumping.
It was ultimately Stuart Binny who broke the partnership, shortly after tea, just when the batsmen looked set to bed in for the second session. Bowling cross-seam, Binny got the first ball of his spell to stop on Agarwal from a good length. Agarwal went through with his drive, playing well in front of his body, managing only to chip the ball to short extra-cover.
But India Red's respite was brief, as Pujara strode in and ensured continuity in the batting side's dominance and the bowling side's largely fruitless toil. He took nine balls to get off the mark, but when it happened it was worth the wait. Skipping to the pitch of a Kuldeep delivery, he drove it sweetly down the ground for four, to the right of a diving wide mid-off.
That was the start of an assured, chanceless knock marked by steady accumulation, solid defence and some dazzling strokes too. The loss of Gambhir and Rohit Sharma at the other end did not in the least deter his determined, inexorable progress.
Pujara showed a penchant for bringing up milestones with boundaries. A cover drive off Mishra brought up his 10,000th run in first-class cricket. A pull through midwicket, off Mishra once again, gave him his fifty. And an expansive extra-cover drive off Stuart Binny took him to his 33rd first-class century as the day drew to a close. In between, he played a number of gorgeous cuts, pulls and back-foot punches, simply because he could.
That he could was down not just to his form and ability, but also to the inability of India Red's bowlers to consistently ask questions of the batsmen's technique. Opening bowlers Pradeep Sangwan and Nathu Singh bowled short of a length and could not generate much swing or seam movement in unhelpful conditions. Mishra and Kuldeep extracted sharp turn and gave the batsmen a few awkward moments, but repeatedly released the pressure with loose balls.
Mishra, in particular, struggled to achieve much control, frequently losing his line and length. Half-trackers, full tosses and wide deliveries peppered his spells.
While remaining wayward in the third session, Mishra managed to slip in a few good deliveries. Shortly after the dinner break, he beat Pujara's outside edge twice with flighted, dipping legbreaks, and induced a skied outside-edge off a Rohit swipe, only for the ball to fall outside the reach of the cover fielder running back.
In Mishra's next over, Rohit attempted another wild swipe across the line, off a good-length legbreak, and this time the mis-hit went straight up and was comfortably pouched by Shikhar Dhawan at cover.
The three deliveries Mishra bowled immediately after taking that wicket neatly encapsulated the day he was having. A half-volley outside off was driven through the covers for four to get Karthik off the mark. A good follow-up delivery induced an inside-edge to short leg but the tough chance was not taken. Then a rank half-tracker was pulled disdainfully through midwicket for another four. The four-ball felt almost inevitable.

New ICC regime trying to sideline BCCI' - Thakur

BCCI president Anurag Thakur has said the board is being "arm-twisted" on two fronts: as a result of the Lodha committee's recommendations for structural reform, and due to the change at the top of the ICC, where Shashank Manohar has taken charge as the independent chairman. Thakur also took exception to Manohar's remarks that his priorities lay with the ICC and not the BCCI. Manoharhad suggested that it wasn't his responsibility but that of the BCCI representative to look after the board's interest at the ICC table.
"I think these [Lodha] recommendations and [the] change in ICC [regime] are arm-twisting BCCI both at home and at the ICC which is not good for Indian cricket," Thakur said. "The situation of BCCI - a global leader till the recommendation of the Lodha committee… now with the new ICC regime they are trying to sideline the BCCI, one of the most important stakeholders in global cricket today. Just [because of] one recommendation, we are not taken seriously."
Thakur, who is in Greater Noida to watch the final of the Duleep Trophy, told reporters that the BCCI, by virtue of being a "global leader", had an obligation to look after the interest of smaller boards. He reiterated the BCCI's concerns over the budget for next year's Champions Trophy in England, which the Indian board felt was three times as much as what was allotted to India for the World T20 earlier this year.
"Yes, BCCI should look after its interests, but BCCI does not only limit itself to look after BCCI's interests," Thakur said. "If he [Manohar] is saying that he has got nothing to do with the BCCI, BCCI is one of the 105 members and one of the most important stakeholders of the ICC today. And, that is why we have raised the issue - when the others kept mum - that we want to go through the Champions Trophy budget.
"Compare the World [T20] Cup with the Champions Trophy - we had 56 matches, Champions Trophy has close to 15 matches; we had eight venues, they had only three venues; it was a 49-day event and the Champions Trophy is only a 20-day event. So the per-match cost is three times higher. Every single penny saved is every single penny earned, not only for BCCI but for 105 countries.
"When you talk about the two-tier Test system, BCCI could have got benefits by joining hands with those associations like Australia and England, but we stood by countries like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, and to an extent like West Indies."
Thakur questioned Manohar's motives for amending the ICC constitution, which played a part in his being elected unopposed as the first independent chairman of the world body. He contended that Manohar hadn't taken all members into confidence before the amendments were made.
"Mr Shashank Manohar was on the board to make certain changes, amendments. As the president of the board he should have taken into confidence all the BCCI members which he did not," he said. "The amendments were made and he became the independent chairman. Once he has become the independent chairman, he left the BCCI when BCCI needed him the most.

BPL players' draft on September 30

The players' draft for this year's Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) will be held on September 30, according to the league's governing council. The tournament will begin on November 4, brought forward by two days as earlier announced.
The BCB did not confirm whether the draft this year would follow last year's format, when franchises called out their choice of local and overseas players after going through multiple rounds of lotteries to choose who called first. In the end, the icon players (the top Bangladeshi cricketers) were distributed equally among the franchises through a separate lottery.
There will be seven franchises this year, one more than the six that played in 2012, 2013 and 2015. Khulna and Rajshahi have returned after missing out in 2015. They will join defending champions Comilla Victorians, Barisal Bulls, Rangpur Riders, Dhaka Dynamites and Chittagong Vikings. The Sylhet franchise, which according to the BCB had breached franchisee agreement terms, will miss out.
The identity of the Khulna and Rajshahi franchise owners is not known yet, though the BCB mentioned that Gemcon Group and Mango Entertainment Ltd had "specifically expressed interest in owning the Khulna and Rajshahi franchises respectively".
The board will announce the names after the Eid break.
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent.@isam84

Scotland take series with MacLeod's ton

Calum MacLeod struck his second hundred in three ODIs to lead Scotland to a 53-run win over Hong Kong in Edinburgh and take the series 1-0.
MacLeod made 102 off 107 balls and spearheaded a 116-run sixth-wicket partnership - a Scotland record - to help his side recover from a poor spell in the middle overs and post 266 for 7.
The hosts were eyeing a lot more after they won the toss and captainKyle Coetzer produced a stroke-filled 48 from 42 balls. However, he was the second man out with the score on 63 and then watched his side slip to 144 for 5 in the 33rd over.
Disappointment kept piling up for Coetzer - had he scored one more run he would have become Scotland's highest run-getter in ODIs beating Gavin Hamilton's 1231 - until Craig Wallace, playing only his seventh ODI, chipped in with a run-a-ball 52 and gave the set batsman MacLeod the support he had been desperate for.
MacLeod's first fifty came off 67 balls, but the next one came off only 38. With him in charge, Scotland added 116 runs in their final 15 overs.
Hong Kong made a steady start to their chase. Their captain Babar Hayat and Nizakat Khan were even able to regain momentum after a spell of play when they lost two wickets for nine runs between the ninth and 13th overs. But once their 90-run stand - joint-highest for Hong Kong's third wicket - was broken, the middle-order collapsed. Scotland owed their bowling turnaround to the 22-year old Chris Sole. Playing his third ODI, he took 4 for 28 to bundle Hong Kong out for 213 after they had been 139 for 2.
"We got a good start with the run chase, Nizakat and I were playing nicely and then we collapsed," Hayat said after his highest ODI score of 56 went in vain. "They took two really good catches and saved a lot of singles and twos and we didn't do that. That was the big difference for me.
"We need to work on our fielding, in every game we gave away 20-30 runs and today it put us under a lot of pressure so that is something we have to work on."
"Overall we've played really well on this tour [of the UK] - we brought a lot of young guys and are missing key players. So it's a learning process for us and we will be a lot better for the experience.

Rumana's historic hat-trick seals series for Bangladesh

Legspinner Rumana Ahmed's hat-trick - the first in international cricket by a Bangladesh Women's cricketer - helped her side defend a small total of 106 and beat Ireland Women by 10 runs in the third ODI to claim the series 1-0.
Ireland had begun their chase of 107 well, with the openers Meg Kendal and Cecelia Joyce adding 52. Offspinner Khadija Tul Kubra dismissed Kendal and No. 3 Shauna Kanavagh quickly but the big setback to Ireland's innings came when Cecelia was run out for 35. Having lost Isobel Joyce for 2, Ireland's chase was starting to look shaky at 84 for 4 when Rumana struck. She dismissed Kim Garth, Clare Shillington and Mary Waldron off successive balls to leave Ireland's chase in tatters. Laura Delany, Ireland's captain, pushed the score along to 96 before she too was dismissed and Bangladesh wrapped up the win in the 38th over.
Bangladesh's spinners split up all eight bowler dismissals in Ireland's innings. Apart from Rumana's 3 for 20, Tul Kubra and legspinner Fahima Khatun took two wickets each, while left-arm spinner Nahida Akter had returns of 1 for 18. Khatun's 2 for 13 was her best in ODIs.
Earlier, medium-pacer Amy Kenealy wrecked Bangladesh's top order, leaving them tottering at 25 for 5 after they had opted to bat first. Her career-best 4 for 32 accounted for four of Bangladesh's top six. Opener Sanjida Islam top-scored with 33 and led a brief fightback, adding 44 for the sixth wicket with Ritu Moni. Jahanara Alam and Akter shared another useful partnership of 32 runs for the eighth wicket, lifting the score past 100. The failure of the middle order, however, meant that Bangladesh could only muster a total of 106. Twenty-six extras, including 23 wides, were the second-biggest contribution in Bangladesh's total.
The third ODI was not originally scheduled in the series but was added after the first ODI was abandoned without a ball bowled. The second match, which was curtailed to 47-overs-a-side, then saw only 18 overs of play before being abandoned. Bangladesh had earlier lost the T20I series 0-1.

Ronchi among back-up opening options in India - Hesson

New Zealand coach Mike Hesson has said that wicketkeeper-batsmanLuke Ronchi could be one of the contenders for a place in the Test XI as the side looks for an opening batsman who can combat spin on the tour of India.
Hesson said that New Zealand's regular opening pair of Martin Guptilland Tom Latham were likely for the first Test in Kanpur, from September 22, but the side had back-up options in Ronchi, Mitchell Santner and Henry Nicholls. Ronchi has played only one Test so far -against England at Headingley last year.
"It's not your traditional New Zealand opener that you require over there; you need guys who can score against spin, find ways to rotate the strike and keep the game moving," Hesson was quoted as saying bystuff.co.nz. "It does [bring Ronchi into the mix]. Luke's there as a back-up batsman as well as a back-up keeper. His ability against spin certainly makes him an option."
Hesson said the selection of the line-up would be influenced by the likelihood of spinners, particularly R Ashwin, opening the bowling for India or being brought into the attack early on.
"Seamers if anything might bowl two-three overs up front and it's more likely they're going to have spin at one end to start with if they're going to play three of them," he said. "And if you've got two left-handers against Ashwin at the top it's going to be a big challenge for us. We have to assess conditions and pick what we think is the right mix."
Hesson also stated that New Zealand could consider three spinners if the Kanpur pitch looks dry. If implemented, the three-spinner strategy will see offspinner Mark Craig's return to the New Zealand side. Craig has played only one of New Zealand's six Tests this year - against Australia in Wellington - but Hesson felt the offspinner had come back well from the 2015-16 season where he took 10 wickets in four Tests at an average of 66.60.
Between them, Craig, Ish Sodhi and Santner have played only 34 Tests but Hesson said that all three had evolved well. Sodhi and Santner had an impressive run during the World T20 in India earlier this year, leading the wicket charts for New Zealand with 10 dismissals each.
"They're a young spin-bowling group. Probably Ish and Mitch have found white-ball cricket a little easier than Test cricket," Hesson said. "They're both evolving nicely and it's about giving them opportunity.
"I've been really pleased with the way Mark Craig has come back from last season. He's made a few changes technically and the ball seems to be coming out really nicely."
One worry for New Zealand is Guptill's form in 2016. In the home series against Australia, he scored 81 runs in four innings at 20.25, while his record in South Africa was worse - 15 runs in three innings. His only Test fifty in six matches this year came against Zimbabwe. In India, Guptill has scored 187 runs in four Tests at an average of 23.37 with two fifties. Hesson encouraged Guptill to play the natural, attacking game that has brought him success in limited-overs cricket.
"That message has been out there a long time," Hesson said. "It's important for Martin that we can see that out on the field and he can transfer what he's been training onto the park. I know he's working hard at it."
Guptill too admitted he needed to show more intent in Test cricket. In an interview to radiolive.co.nz, he said: "Test cricket is the pinnacle and it means everything to me to play. I've had a bit of a survival mode about the way I play Test cricket but the intent needs to be there about scoring runs so I just need to go out there and have the intent to score runs in my batting."
Allrounder Jimmy Neesham will be another important player as New Zealand look to balance their attack on spin-friendly pitches. Neesham's previous international appearance was the Brisbane Test against Australia, and he was ruled out of subsequent matches due to a back injury. Having made his return to the Test squad, Neesham is confident he can cope with the workload of the five-day format.
"We've gone about things a little different this time, been more thorough and hopefully that will give the chance of a successful comeback," Neesham said. "I feel a lot fresher now, both while batting and with my bowling.
"I've been able to get my loads up now to a level where I should be able to get through Test cricket. The proof will be in the pudding, but I'm confident."
New Zealand will play a three-day tour match against Mumbai in Delhi between September 16 and 18, before the first Test in Kanpur. The second and third Tests will be played in Kolkata and Indore from September 30 and October 8 respectively.

India Red wilt as Pujara reaches tenth double-ton

Having amassed 707 in their last match, India Blue seemed set to go even further in the Duleep Trophy final, as Cheteshwar Pujara's tenth first-class double-hundred stretched their score to 593 for 4 by the dinner break on day two. With him was Sheldon Jackson, who capitalised on three lives to move to 129 in an unbroken fourth-wicket partnership of 231.
With just over ten days to go for India's first Test against New Zealand, Pujara has made 166 and 212* in successive first-class matches, suggesting a return to the insatiable ways of his best years. Pujara now has as many first-class double-hundreds as Vijay Hazare, Sunil Gavaskar and Rahul Dravid among Indian batsmen, and only Vijay Merchant, with 11, sits above him.
Though Pujara began the day on 111 with a well-set Dinesh Karthik for company, the first session was far more testing for the batsmen than they might have anticipated. It opened with a wicket off the first ball, when Karthik, playing a loose drive away from his body, edged an innocuous delivery from Pradeep Sangwan onto his stumps.
Through the first session, the India Red quicks showed a substantial improvement from their day-one display, with Sangwan and Nathu Singh forcing the batsmen to play far more often and benefiting from occasional lateral movement when the ball pitched on one of the ever-widening cracks. Jackson, in particular, looked uncomfortable early on. His first 17 balls featured a number of plays and misses but not a single run. When he eventually got off the mark, it was courtesy an edge off Nathu that just evaded Yuvraj Singh at first slip.
The fast bowlers' improved showing seemed to rub off on the rest of the attack. Stuart Binny created the first genuine chance of the day when a length ball stopped on Jackson, who drove it in the air to the bowler's left. Though Binny got a hand to it, he was unable to hold on. Then Jackson, batting on 29, top-edged an attempted late cut off Amit Mishra and Yuvraj shelled a slip catch that ought to have been taken.
Having got through the tough initial period, Pujara and Jackson began to impose themselves. In addition to his usual repertoire of strokes, Pujara unfurled a couple of neat reverse-sweeps against Mishra. After his two reprieves, Jackson gradually became more assured and settled in to some fine strokeplay of his own. Pujara brought up his double ton and Jackson his ton and, though the latter was reprieved once again when Dhawan dropped him on 108 off Kuldeep Yadav, diving to his right at midwicket, the batsmen were now firmly in control.
As the day wore on, India Red's intensity dropped sharply. After the tea interval, Gurkeerat Singh and Kuldeep dished out a number of unthreatening overs that enabled the batsmen to milk their way to a double-century stand. Both tended to drop short, allowing the batsmen to rock back to cut or pull or clip the ball through midwicket. Their slowness in the air also offered opportunities for Pujara and Jackson to skip to the pitch and smother the spin.
It all seemed a bit too easy. The introduction of Yuvraj did little to change that. Nor did Mishra's switch to bowling around the wicket. As the total ticked past 500 and then towards 600, India Red spread the field and seemed content to let the game drift. And drift it did - further and further away from them.

Thursday, 31 March 2016

World T20 India vs West 2016

World T20 India vs West Indies semi-final
2nd Semi-Final match of ICC T20 World Cup 2016 at , Mumbai played on Mar 31, 2016
India's road to semi-final 
The Wankhede Stadium track being prepared for the ICC World T20 semi final clash between India and the West Indies
Chris Gayle. Virat Kohli. Dwayne Bravo. MS Dhoni. The Wankhede stadium will be screening an ensemble-driven action movie as much it hosts a cricket match on Thursday night. Those individuals and their styles of play contribute to a lot of the interest surrounding this game, and also typify there are various ways to establish T20 batting dominance.
India's has been to simply extend their Test and one-day game into the Twenty20s arena, and when all goes well, they get the bulk of their runs through orthodox cricket. West Indies, ideally, wouldn't want their long-format form anywhere near them right now. Helpfully, this format has a tight cap on the number of overs so the big-hitters can keep hitting big without worrying about consequences.
Case in point are the methods that their marquee players use. Gayle likes to "beat" the ball. No wonder it rockets as far away from him as it can, hoping to be lost somewhere in the rings of Saturn. Kohli is kinder in assisting with the ball's travels, and even throws in a few surprises - patrons waiting in the off stump line could end up at midwicket almost as often as they do in the covers.

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