Posts Tagged ‘England’

Tim Paine ruled out for rest of india ODIs

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Graham Manou will replace injured wicketkeeper Tim Paine for Australia’s one-day series in India, Cricket Australia said on Thursday. Paine fractured the ring finger of his right hand during Wednesday’s second ODI against India in Nagpur.

Manou, who acted as a back-up for injured wicketkeeper Brad Haddin during this year’s Ashes Test series in England, will leave for India late on Thursday, CA said.

Tim Paine has a fractured finger from the game last night and is unable to take any further part in the series. He will return to Australia as soon as the replacement arrives in India,” chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch said in a statement.

ICC TEST TEAM RANKING

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

ICC TEST TEAM RANKING

Country Rank Ratings
South Africa 1 122
Sri Lanka 2 120
India 3 119
Australia 4 116
England 5 105
Last Updated: Sun, Aug 30, 2009

Challenge to become a better ODI team : Owais Shah

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

It was nice winning the final One-dayer against Australia after losing the first six games. Now the real challenge for us is to keep the momentum going. It has put us in the right frame of mind for the upcoming Champions Trophy and will help our cause immensely.
We need to keep up the spirit of winning and the result will take care of itself. Going into the tournament , one thing that we want to change is the record of English ODI teams.
We have not won anything major in this format and have not even featured in a major Cup final since 1992. So heres the challenge for us.
One of the factors for our poor record is that we do not play as much One-day cricket as a team as the subcontinent teams do.
Besides, we have had different coaches in the last decade who have different thoughts about the One-day format.
While other teams have increased their quota of games, we havent . All this put together could be a reason for our struggle.
We have got some good young players, who have got nothing to lose. We just need to board the flight and go to South Africa and express ourselves fearlessly.
Of course, we do miss the likes of Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff. They are among the top ten players in the world. But we have to move forward and its an opportunity for young players to fill those big shoes.
My own form was down a bit in the last seven ODIs against Australia , but in West Indies and in the English summer I was hitting the ball really well. It was bit of a shame that I did not score many runs against Australia, but now comes the time to turn the corner.
Readers in India may wonder how despite having a county system where we play so much oneday cricket we still do not produce results at the international level.
One reason for that could be that at the county level we are in different teams working with different ideas. It is a matter of England ODI team working together and spending a lot of time to create an understanding and transform the results. I am sure with the new players coming in this is the start of a new One-day team.
Of course leading the way are two men I know very well. Andrew Strauss and coach Andy Flower. They instill confidence in us by looking at the positives.

Flintoff’s fling inspires England Ashes glory

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Amid scenes of delirium unwitnessed in South London since the unforgettable summer of 2005, England’s cricketers reclaimed the Ashes on a tumultuous fourth afternoon at The Oval, as Australia’s brave resistance – led by a century of incredible mental fortitude from Michael Hussey – was unpicked, wicket by wicket, minute by minute, until, at 5.47pm, and with an expectant crowd willing on the moment of glory, Hussey prodded Graeme Swann to Alastair Cook at short leg to spark the celebrations into life.  At the moment of victory, all of England’s players rushed into a huddle on the edge of the square – all except for one, that is. In his moment of Test retirement, Andrew Flintoff’s first instinct was to seek out and console the crestfallen centurion Hussey, whose 121 from 263 balls had given his side a hope of salvation, but whose careless running between the wickets during a fraught afternoon session had been the single biggest factor in their demise. By calling for the single that led to the run-out of his captain and resistance-leader Ricky Ponting for 66, Hussey is unlikely to recall this particular innings with any fondness whatsoever.

Inevitably, it was Flintoff who stole the show from the Australians. He could not be the tub-thumping batsman of old in this series, while his bowling – though thunderous at Lord’s – faded cruelly as the concerns about his right knee began to mount. But as a presence, and as a man who can make things happen on a cricket field, his spell has scarcely diminished. In a moment that is sure to be replayed for years on end, he gathered a firm clip from Hussey, steadied himself as Ponting hesitated fatally, then unleashed a fast, flat, unerring swing of the arm that plucked out the off stump with Ponting a foot short.

Though the decision went to a replay, Flintoff was in no doubt. He raised his arms in his now-habitual Kodak pose, and waited to be enveloped by his jubilant team-mates. It was a moment eerily reminiscent of Gary Pratt’s series-turning shy at Trent Bridge in 2005, when Ponting once again was the fall guy, and it uncorked the tensions in the crowd as surely as the champagne was uncorked in England’s dressing-room some three hours later. It brought to an end an unnerving stand of 127, and it shattered Australia’s collective will.

Five balls later, their batsman of the series, Michael Clarke ran himself out for a duck after a clip off the pads ricocheted to Andrew Strauss at leg slip, and Australia could not recover their poise. Though Hussey was badly dropped by Paul Collingwood at slip on 55 off Swann, in Swann’s next over, Marcus North dragged his back foot out of the crease as he swung at a big ripper, and Matt Prior, having gathered well high to his left, flicked off the bails almost as an afterthought. Their target of 546 had become a distant figment of their imagination, and at 236 for 5, their only remaining hope was to bat out the final four sessions of the series.

Brad Haddin chose pugnacity as the means to reboot Australia’s innings, and he signalled his intent with two fours in his first nine balls, including a fizzing cover-drive as James Anderson overpitched. But Anderson might have dismissed him three times in a single over, including a regulation clip to short midwicket that was spilled by the substitute, Graham Onions. As he and Hussey took their seventh-wicket stand to 91, an ever-anxious crowd began to shuffle in their seats. On 34, however, his luck finally ran out, as he advanced down the track to Swann and picked out Strauss with a lofted flick to deep midwicket.

It was to be the game-breaking moment. Strauss, usually the coolest of characters in the field, celebrated euphorically as The Oval erupted once more, and seven balls later, the end truly was nigh. Steve Harmison – hitherto muted on a pitch that did not suit his style – extracted enough life for Mitchell Johnson to fence to second slip, where Collingwood, to his relief and joy, finally held on. Then, when Peter Siddle played around his front pad to lob a simple chance to mid-off, Harmison had his second scalp in the space of 12 balls.

That quickly became three in 13, as Stuart Clark fenced nervily to Cook at short leg, and though Hilfenhaus averted the hat-trick with a stabbed defence straight back down the track, there was no longer any way to stem England’s tide of emotion. With Harmison stalking to the crease with a predatory menace unseen in Ashes cricket for four long years, the crowd finally dared to proclaim the Ashes were coming home. Fifteen balls later, they were.

Some six hours earlier, England’s day of destiny had dawned with more than just a frisson of anxiety in the air, thanks to the ease with which Australia’s openers had pushed along at four runs an over on the third evening of the match. But Swann soothed the nation by claiming the initial breakthrough at the end of his second over, tweaking a succession of sharply spinning offbreaks past Simon Katich’s edge, before nailing him plumb lbw with the arm-ball.

Swann bounced for joy in the middle of the pitch as a massive roar of relief and ecstasy erupted from the stands, but almost immediately the fervour morphed into a respectful standing ovation for the incoming Ponting, in his 136th Test and almost certainly his last in England after four memorable Ashes tours.

Before he had faced a delivery, however, England had struck again, as Broad this time hurried Shane Watson on off stump and beat the inside-edge of his defensive prod. Watson did not seem best amused at the decision, but replays suggested there was nothing wrong with the appeal at all. For all of Watson’s impressive form in five innings at the top of Australia’s order, it was nevertheless the fourth time this series he had fallen in such a manner. Food for thought as he works on his new career as an opener.

At 90 for 2 and with a jittery Hussey at the crease, England swarmed onto the offensive, with Swann camping four men around the bat at all times and at one stage sending down 28 dot balls in a row as Hussey prodded and smothered with desperate determination. At the other end, Ponting’s eagerness to play the pull was tempered by his wariness of the vagaries of the wicket, although whenever he was tempted, he executed the stroke with the mastery that has made it his calling-card for the past decade.

In the first over after lunch, Ponting laced a first-ball full-toss from Broad through the covers for four, then tickled Swann around the corner to bring up a battling and brilliant half-century from 76 deliveries. Broad subsequently received a warning for running on the pitch to deepen the crowd’s growing concerns, who had just seen Collingwood at slip parry a rare Ponting edge with his left boot. But then up popped Flintoff, and once he’d had his say, there was no holding back the inevitable.

Final hurrah for Freddie

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

England allrounder Andrew Flintoff is confident of being fit to round off his Test career in this weeks final Ashes match against Australia . Flintoff missed the fourth Test, which Australia won by an innings and 80 runs to draw level at 1-1 , because of a knee injury. But he said on Tuesday that he has batted and bowled in training to prove his fitness for the series decider at the Oval.
The 31-year-old allrounder is stepping down from Tests after the Ashes in order to reduce the strain on his body and concentrate on limitedovers cricket. But he said that wasnt playing on his mind as he prepares for a final fitness test. Its my last Test, but Im not too fussed about that, Flintoff said. Its more the chance to win Ashes again.
A talismanic member of the team that won the urn in 2005 and then lost it to a 5-0 mauling two years later, Flintoff is key to Englands hopes of a shock victory over an Australia side that appears to have played itself into winning form.
Flintoff hit a 27-ball 30 not out and took five second-innings wickets to help England to victory in the second Test at Lords , but his condition appeared to deteriorate throughout the third Test.

BCCI compensates IPL teams for CL cancellation

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

The Indian cricket board (BCCI) has compensated two Indian Premier League franchisees Team Rajasthan and Team Chennai with a sum of Rs 22 crore each, as compensation for the cancellation of the Champions League Twenty20, which got cancelled last year due to the 26/11 attack in Mumbai.
As a part of the compensation package, we have decided to compensate these teams because the Champions League got cancelled last year, IPL chairman Lalit Modi told TOI on Monday.
Incidentally, the other six teams Victoria and Western Australia (Australia), Titans and Dolphin (South Africa), Middlesex (England) and Sialkot Stallions (Pakistan ) were supposed to take part in the competition are yet to get any financial succour from their respective national boards.

Pietersen ruled out of ODIs too:

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Injured England batsman Kevin Pietersen has been ruled out of the one-dayers against Australia also due to infection in his wound following an urgent surgery on his achilles tendon. The flamboyant batsman played only the first two Ashes Tests at Cardiff and Lords with the help of pain-killing injections and underwent a surgery to get back for the seven-match ODI series. He was seen by a wound-care specialist and will receive a course of antibiotics in order to exclude infection, an ECB statement said on Thursday. 

Australia call up Dutch pacer Dirk Nannes for T20 clash

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Australia has named Victorian leftarmer Dirk Nannes in its Twenty20 squad to play England only months after he represented the Netherlands at the world T20 tournament. The inclusion of 33-year-old Nannes and resting of captain Ricky Ponting are the main surprises in the national squads named on Tuesday for the seven one-day international matches and two T20 matches which follow the current Ashes series in England.
The Sydney Morning Herald quoted an AAP report, as saying that notable omissions from the T20 squad include Mike Hussey, Nathan Bracken and Peter Siddle all of whom are still in the ODI squad. Chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch added a new name to the mix by employing Tasmanian wicketkeeper Tim Paine as Brad Haddins understudy for the ODI series.
Speaking about Nannes, Hilditch said his panel was looking at using a greater number of specialists ahead of next years World T20 following a disappointing result when eliminated early in this years event. We are using the two matches against England to look at different make ups to the squad and include players who we consider T20 specialists in preparation for the ICC World T20 next year, he said. We are keen to look at different players as specialist T20 players in these two matches and in this instance we have selected Dirk Nannes following his strong domestic performances in recent seasons to have a look at him in the Australian set up.
Pontings resting following the end of the Ashes series was described by Hilditch as the last chance to give him a break before 2010.

Players can choose their CL teams

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

In the Champions League scheduled for October , a player who qualifies from two different teams (the IPL team and the club team from his own country) can choose which team he wants to represent.
If a player has played for an IPL team and that team has qualified for the Champions League, and at the same time if he has played for his home team or club and that team has qualified too, the player can choose whom to play for. The option has been given to the player. If the player chooses to play for his home team, so be it. If the player chooses his IPL team, the IPL will compensate the home board to the tune of $200,000 (fixed price). In case the player opts for his home team, nothing will be compensated to the IPL franchise , IPL commissioner Lalit Modi explained.

ICL still a sore point, Northants cannot qualify

Northamptonshire will not qualify for the Champions League even if they make it to the final of Englands domestic T20 tournament.
Modi said the presence of several players who have not severed links with the rebel Indian Cricket League was unacceptable . Nicky Boje and Andrew Hall, both in the Northants team, have not cancelled their contracts with the rebel league. Modi says Champions League guidelines are very clear. They state that any team which fields a barred player or a rebel league player and that team qualifies to play the Champions League then that team will be disqualified. So, even if Northants qualify, they will be barred.

World Cricket Schedule 2009-10

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009
Australia in England
Date Match Venue Time
July 8-12 First Test Cardiff 1530 IST
July 16-20 Second Test Lord’s 1530 IST
July 30-Aug 3 Third Test Edgbaston 1530 IST
Aug 7-11 Fourth Test Leeds 1530 IST
Aug 20-24 Fifth Test Kennington Oval 1530 IST
Aug 30 First T20 Old Trafford 1900 IST
Sept 1 Second T20 Old Trafford 2330 IST
Sept 4 First ODI Kennington Oval 1730 IST
Sept 6 Second ODI Lord’s 1445 IST
Sept 9 Third ODI The Rose Bowl 1900 IST
Sept 12 Fourth ODI Lord’s 1445 IST
Sept 15 Fifth ODI Trent Bridge 1900 IST
Sept 17 Sixth ODI Trent Bridge 1900 IST
Sept 20 Seventh ODI Chester-le-Street 1445 IST
Pakistan in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
July 4-8 First Test Galle 1000 IST
July 12-16 Second Test Colombo 1000 IST
July 20-24 Third Test Colombo (SSC) 1000 IST
July 30 First ODI Dambulla 0930 IST
Aug 1 Second ODI Dambulla 0930 IST
Aug 3 Third ODI Dambulla 1900 IST
Aug 7 Fourth ODI Colombo (RPS) 1430 IST
Aug 9 Fifth ODI Colombo (RPS) 1430 IST
Aug 12 Only T20 Colombo (RPS) 1800 IST
Bangladesh in West Indies
Date Match Venue Time
July 9-13 First Test Kingstown 1930 IST
July 17-21 Second Test St George’s 1930 IST
July 26 First ODI Roseau 1900 IST
July 28 Second ODI Roseau 1900 IST
July 31 Third ODI Basseterre 1900 IST
August 2 Fourth ODI Basseterre 2330 IST
Pakistan in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
Jul 30 First ODI Dambulla 1000 IST
Aug 1 Second ODI Dambulla 1000 IST
Aug 3 Third ODI Colombo 1000 IST
Aug 7 Fourth ODI (D/N) Colombo 1430 IST
Aug 9 Fifth ODI (D/N) Colombo 1430 IST
Aug 12 Only T20I (D/N) Colombo 1900 IST
New Zealand in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
Aug 18-22 First Test Galle 1000 IST
Aug 26-30 Second Test Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 2 First T20I Colombo 1900 IST
Sept 4 Second T20I Colombo 1900 IST
Tri-series in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
Sept 8 Sri Lanka vs New Zealand Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 10 Sri Lanka vs India Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 12 India vs New Zealand Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 14 Final Colombo 1000 IST
ICC Champions Trophy
Group A: Australia (1), India (4), Pakistan (5), West Indies (8)

Group B: South Africa (2), New Zealand (3), Sri Lanka (6), England (7)

Date Match Venue Time
Sep 22 Group B – South Africa vs Sri Lanka (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 23 Group A – Pakistan v West Indies (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Sep 24 Group B – South Africa v New Zealand Centurion 1300 IST
Sep 25 Group B – England v Sri Lanka (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Sep 26 Group A – Australia v West Indies Johannesburg 1300 IST
Sep 26 Group A – India v Pakistan (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 27 Group B – New Zealand v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 1300 IST
Sep 27 Group B – South Africa v England (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 28 Group A – Australia v India (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 29 Group B – England v New Zealand (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Sep 30 Group A – Australia v Pakistan Centurion 1300 IST
Sep 30 Group A – India v West Indies (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Oct 2 1st Semi-Final (D/N) – (A1 v B2) Centurion 1800 IST
Oct 3 2nd Semi-Final (D/N) – (B1 v A2) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Oct 5 Final (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
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