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Brayshaw quits Kent

Kent’s director of cricket, Ian Brayshaw, has turned down the offer of an extension to his contract, and will not be returning to Canterbury next season.”I have enjoyed every minute of my time at Kent,” said Brayshaw, who is to return home to Perth after two years. "I shall take with me many happy memories and am confident that the club will continue to perform at the top of English county cricket for many years to come.”Kent finished third in the Championship last season, and put a bad start to 2003 behind them to finish mid-table in Division One, although they still face relegation in the National League unless they can beat Warwickshire on Sunday. “The playing staff contains some highly talented cricketers who offer the club a really exciting future,” said Brayshaw. "In Simon Willis and Chris Stone the club have two excellent coaches.””Ian has made a huge contribution during his two years at Kent," said their chairman of cricket Mike Denness. “He has left us with his thoughts regarding the best possible coaching structure for the future. We will be giving these full consideration over the next few weeks before making any decision regarding his successor.”

Super Fours to be decided on last day as England all-rounders secure victories

England’s leading run-scorers Charlotte Edwards (Kent) and Claire Taylor (Berkshire) will lead their Super Fours teams to the final round of matches next weekend with just one point separating them.With additional points awarded for match-winning and superior batting and bowling performances in the domestic competition for elite women’s cricketers, the title is still in the balance.The Knight Riders, captained by Edwards, must beat The Braves – last year’s winners captained by Clare Connor – and hope The V Team cause an improbable upset in the last round of matches by beating Taylor’s Super Strikers.The teams contested the penultimate round in Nottingham today, with The Knight Riders defeating The V Team by six wickets and The Strikers beating The Braves by 31 runs.The Super Strikers faced The Braves and, after a slow start, reached 156-7, scoring two thirds of their runs in the final 15 overs. England and Yorkshire all-rounder Laura Spragg performed a characteristic entertaining cameo with the bat, racing to 21 before being dismissed by fellow England bowler Laura Harper.Spragg then took two wickets for just 15 runs and with Laura Newton taking 3-26, The Strikers sealed victory in the 45th over.Despite miserly bowling from Isa Guha and Beth Morgan in their opening spells, Hannah Lloyd and Salliann Briggs built a solid partnership, allowing young England bowlers Spragg and Shaw (24 not out) to accelerate the run-rate at the end.The Knight Riders exerted their authority on The V Team immediately restricting them to just 95 runs; Marsha Davies taking 4-16 from an 8 over spell with Helen Wardlaw and Jenny Gunn taking two wickets each. The V Team remain without a victory in the 2003 competition.England’s U19 batters Rosalie Birch and Lydia Greenway chipped away at the 95 run lead, with another young England and Yorkshire bowler, Helen Wardlaw, finishing the chase scoring 17 from 7 balls, including the winning runs.A full scorecard and points table can be found at www.Super4s.play-cricket.comMatches will begin at 12 noon on Saturday 21st June, and be played at The Parks and Radely College, Oxford.

Rain the winner on day two at Hove

In stark contrast to the fine weather on the first day of the match between Sussex and the Zimbabwe at Hove, the second day provided almost unrelieved drizzle. The weather did briefly look like clearing up after lunch, but more rain led to the abandonment of the day’s play just after four o’clock. Zimbabwe remained on 317 for 4, with Mark Vermeulen unbeaten on 194.

New Zealand looking to make most of home advantage

Being back at home after the rigours of touring Australia, and the especially tough schedule of the last two weeks of the VB Series would help New Zealand in their preparation for the start of the National Bank One-Day International series against England in Christchurch tomorrow.New Zealand have lost their last five games in a row, including both finals in Australia, but now find themselves up against an England side who won their last two matches in India.New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming said being at home was a big factor in turning performances around.”We’ve been looking forward to playing at home for awhile. We’re looking forward to showing what we’ve learnt on our development process and playing at home is always special.”Our last month of competition against two very good sides has given us a good indication of where we are and what we need to do for the World Cup so I think in 12 months time we will be a very good side. We learnt some good lessons and have got to put them into place straight away,” he said.Fleming said New Zealand would not be taking England for granted despite their comparative lack of exposure to ODI cricket. The English comeback in India had shown the side’s fortitude and the New Zealanders respect that, and respect all the English players.”We respect all of the players. If you start picking out one or two you forget the other nine and get yourself into trouble. Our preparation is based on thoroughness,” he said.While the call-up of young Northern Districts tearaway Ian Butler was the result of the disappointing loss of Shane Bond to injury, if there is one captain in international cricket who is used to introducing new bowlers to the game, it is Fleming. He has made it an art form.Fleming has not seen Butler bowl in a match.”He has got pace. He is raw but that can be exciting and it is a great opportunity for the young lad and I think it is a positive step looking forward to 12 months time.”We are going to learn something about a young player who could have a role in the World Cup. His job is to provide the strike power we will miss with Shane Bond and from all accounts he can do that,” he said.The loss of Bond was a blow to the side especially after the impact he created among New Zealanders watching the Australian series on television.”He played extremely well in Australia and got good results. He, out of anyone, was looking forward to coming home and starting at home. From a team perspective we are going to miss him, and miss him massively, but we also look forward to an opportunity for another young player.”We might unleash another Shane Bond and that is an exciting prospect to have two young guys with genuine pace with the new ball for the next 12-18 months.”The selection, I think, is a positive move to keep our tactics in place. While it will be seen as a gamble, and it is a gamble, but it is one that is calculated in a way that we think this is the way to play one-day cricket in the future and it is perhaps an indication of the way the one-day game will be played in South Africa.”I’ll have to do a lot of work with him today. I will give him the guidelines and go through the plans quite extensively this afternoon.”It doesn’t really change much from what he has been doing. He’s there to bowl fast, to express himself and he’s there to have fun. While it is a pressure-cooker situation the only thing we can do is, and Chris Cairns will handle that, getting the mental side of things right.”Fleming said he was happy with Cairns’ fitness, especially after the back problems he had in Australia. But he said by the end of the tour Cairns was coming back to full fitness.”I think he’s relished the opportunity to slide in behind two opening bowlers. As his career evolves further, he probably sees that as a good opportunity to finish his career. It’s good for him, it’s good on his body so that is a win-win situation from my position.”The trend of the tournament had been been that opening partnerships were not very high. New Zealand were still developing information on which combination was going to best suit it.”It was a problem for us in Australia and this combination [Nathan Astle-Chris Nevin] is another attempt for us to get it right.”I’m finding myself more stimulated by the one-day game, there is more opportunity to take wickets and the bowlers feel they are always in with a chance,” Fleming said.

Milestone Preview: Zimbabwe v Kenya

Grant Flower (ZIM) needs 52 runs to complete 6000 ODI runs
Thomas Odoyo (KEN) needs 19 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Hitesh Modi (KEN) needs 147 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Grant Flower (ZIM) needs 3 wickets to join the 100 ODI-wicket club
Grant Flower (ZIM) need 26 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Heath Streak (ZIM) needs 174 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Steve Tikolo (KEN) needs 40 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Maurice Odumbe (KEN) needs 105 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Ravindu Shah (KEN) needs 142 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Kennedy Otieno (KEN) needs 108 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Heath Streak (ZIM) needs 5 wickets to join the 25 World Cup wicket-club
Maurice Odumbe (KEN) needs 7 wickets to join the 25 World Cup wicket-club

Christmas comes early for Test umpires

Two umpiring mates, Brent Bowden and Tony Hill, chatted about their Christmas-present wish-list during the Auckland-Central Districts State Championship match at Eden Park Outer Oval last week.Both said that top of the present list would be a free five-day pass as umpires to a New Zealand Test match against the touring Bangladesh side.Yesterday Brian Aldridge, the New Zealand Cricket umpiring manager, changed into a red suit, donned the white whiskers and with a ho-ho-ho granted both their wishes.Hill, from Papakura and a staunch Counties and Northern Districts man, will stand in the first Bangladesh-New Zealand Test at Hamilton starting on December 18, and Bowden will be umpire for the second Test at the Basin Reserve starting on December 26.This will be Hill’s first Test, and Bowden’s second – he stood in the New Zealand-Australia Test at Eden Park in early 2000.”Billy” Bowden was delighted to be back in the Test lists, and especially pleased that Hill had won his first Test, after six years an umpire and seven One-Day Internationals.”This is a fantastic thing for Tony, he has earned it and now he will have the special pleasure of starting his Test career on his home ND ground at Hamilton,” said Bowden.”It will be good to have a Test at Hamilton, with ‘Turk’ (John Turkington, the ND chief executive) and my Northern Districts mates there,” said Hill.”I realised that this is the last year under the present Test umpiring appointment system, and next year the International Cricket Councill will change the system,” said Hill, “so I was rather hopeful that I could get a Test before the new scheme comes in.”And now it comes as a nicely wrapped Christmas present.”Bowden and the touring Bangladeshis will get a preview of each other’s Test form when the tourists start a three-day game against a New Zealand District Association XI at Wanganui tomorrow. Bowden and Dave Quested will be the umpires, Hill and David Orchard (South Africa) will handle the first Test and Bowden and Daryl Harper (Australia) will stand in the second.Barry Jarman of Australia will be the ICC match referee for both Tests.Trevor Chappell, the Bangladesh coach, had his team training this afternoon soon after arriving in Wanganui, and said he had been delighted at the quality of practice facilities offered his team.He expected to name his playing team after inspecting the Victoria Park pitch. It will be a journey into the unknown for Chappell – he does not have any knowledge of the ability or the form of the District Association XI.Teams:Bangladesh (from): Khaled Mashud (captain), Habibul Bashar, Aminul Islam, Javed Omar, Mohammad Ashraful, Al Sahariar, Enamul Haque, Hasibul Hossain, Mohammad Sharif, Khaled Mahmud, Fahim Muntasir, Tushar Imran, Mashrafe Mortaza, Sanwar Hossain.New Zealand District Association XI: Peter McGlashan, Tim Anderson, Simon Andrews, Peter Fulton, Jaden Hatwell, Peter Ingram, Harley James, Taraia Robin, Grant Robinson, Neil Rushton, Greg Todd, Scott Baldwin (12th man).

Nepal cruise to nine wicket win over Canada

Nepal made no race of their ICC Under-19 World Cup Plate Championship match against Canada at Colin Maiden Park in Auckland today.Canada won the toss and batted first, but were rarely comfortable against the useful Nepal attack.Only Jonathan Roberts batted with any confidence while scoring 47 off 89 balls in the middle-order for Canada as they were dismissed for 102 after 46.4 overs.Nepal captain Binod Das took three for 13 off 8.4 overs while Basant Regmi took three for 10 off 10 overs.Yashwant Subedi led the Nepal chase for the target of 103, scoring 41 not out off 57 balls while Bardan Chalise was 32 not out when the winning runs were scored in the 23rd over to give Nepal a nine wicket win.

Minor Counties Championship – Day 3 results

Colwall:
Herefordshire 326-8d & 192-3d v Oxfordshire 248-6 & 127-6
Match drawn
Herefordshire 10pts, Oxfordshire 8ptsHertford:
Bedfordshire 379 & 161-2 v Hertfordshire 194-1d
Match drawn
Hertfordshire 9pts, Bedfordshire 8ptsJesmond:
Northumberland 426-4d v Buckinghamshire 179-4
Match drawn
Northumberland 9pts, Buckinghamshire 6ptsShrewsbury:
Devon 292 v Shropshire 25-1d
Match drawn
Shropshire 8pts, Devon 7ptsBury St Edmunds:
Suffolk 182 & 116-4 v Lincolnshire 242
Match drawn
Suffolk 9pts, Lincolnshire 10ptsSwansea:
Wales 140 & 407-5 v Cornwall 386-5d
Match drawn
Wales 6pts, Cornwall 12pts

Deja vu helps Wellington to strong position on table

The similarities between Wellington’s two State Shield wins at the Basin Reserve this weekend, which gave them two bonus points, 10 points in all, and hurled them to the top of the Shield table, were various and unmistakable.Twice they lost the toss and were forced to bat and twice, in difficult or unproductive conditions, they achieved moderate but defensible totals. Twice they batted with a rich mixture of luck and application, enthusiasm and recklessness to create, through that goulash, an innings of some substance and merit.Then twice and without bowling as well as either of their performances implies, they dismissed their opponents for piecemeal totals and were able to walk away, not only with victories which were as comprehensive as they were improbable, but with the bonus points which are the final arbiters of merit.Yesterday, they made 168 in 50 overs and dismissed Central for 58 in 86 minutes – the lowest score by any New Zealand one-day side in domestic competition against another. Today, they made 206/9 in a match shortened to 42 overs per side by rain, which delayed the start by 90 minutes, and they bowled out Northern for 127 to win by 79 runs in the 37th over.Their 206 was founded on the innings of captain Matthew Bell who made 65, who threaded together a necklace of small performances to form a greater and more valuable whole and who batted all but five of the overs of the innings.Bell left Wellington 164/5 when he was out in the 37th over and was able to see them add another 42 runs at a cost of four wickets in a helter-skelter chase over those last five overs.Just as their 168 against Central had seemed vulnerable on Saturday, till Central’s reply gave it context, Wellington’s 206 today seemed achievable for a Northern side with a reasonable retinue of batting talent. But once again Northern’s reply gave Wellington’s innings lustre and, particularly, reflected credit on the performance of Bell.He glued together Wellington’s innings in a series of small partnerships, the largest of which was his 51 with Chris Nevin and the largest contribution towards which was Nevin’s 28 in 63 minutes. He put on an additional 43 for the second wicket with Richard Jones, who made 14, and 37 with Matthew Walker, who survived him and made 25.There were then, in the final overs, the scattergun contributions of Walker, of Mayu Pasupati who made 14 from nine balls and Mark Jefferson who made 13. These added up to something valuable though no-one matched Bell’s steadiness and application. The innings was weakened by three run outs, including Bell’s which brought his innings to a wasteful finish, and which mirrored the three run outs which blighted their innings of Central Districts.Bell’s 167-minute stay at the crease was almost two hours longer than the residence of any other batsman and he survived exacting spells from Daryl Tuffey, Ian Butler and Joseph Yovich.Butler, who bowls with surprising pace, had disconcerted Jones with a bouncer which struck him through his visor in the first over he received and which left his face raw and puffy through the remainder of the day.The opening salvo of Northern’s reply to Wellington’s 206 made it seem in an instant to shrink in scale. Simon Doull, promoted to open with James Marshall, took two fours and a six among 18 runs from the over from James Franklin – helping himself to 16 – and sending a thrill of nervous anticipation down the backs of the Wellington’s fieldsman.But Doull’s assault was short-lived – a storm which blew itself out too soon. He was out in only the second over of the innings when Northern were 22, when he was 18, and the innings then began to sag into an unseemly mass.Franklin returned determined and revitalised and, after Mark Gillespie had removed Doull and Marshall, claimed two wickets of his own to leave Northern 42/4 when drinks were taken after 14 overs. They had been 34/1 after the seventh over but they added only eight more runs at the cost of the wickets of Marshall, Mark Bailey and Matthew Hart before drinks.Wickets fell at 34, 35 and 36 and by drinks Franklin had 2-25 from seven overs, having bowled six overs for seven runs, and Gillespie had an opening spell of 2-14 from six overs.Walker then cut down the Northern middle order, removing Hamish Marshall and Grant Bradburn, both for six, to leave them 48/5 and 53/6. There was an uncanny rider to the match in the fact five Northern batsmen were out for six.Wellington had Northern 59/8 after 25 overs and were ready to read the last rites over the innings but the corpse was not yet lifeless.Robbie Hart, Northern’s captain, matched Bell by drawing together some shreds of lower order resistance and making them an effective, though finally futile rearguard action.He stayed at the wicket for 70 minutes to record the innings’ top score of 40 and she shared partnerships of 28 in 28 minutes with Tuffey, who made 17, and 40 in 24 minutes with Butler who had a six among his 10 runs.From that 59/8 at the end of the 25th over, Northern resisted a further 12 overs – for more than an hour – and added 68 runs for their last two wickets. There were only nine boundaries in the innings – eight fours and a six – and five of those were taken among those resilient late partnerships.The match should long since have been over. Wellington should have administered the coup de grace before the 30th over. Instead the match wandered on amid gathering gloom till Hart was out, bowled by Walker, in the 37th over and shortly after 8pm.Walker finished with 3-13 from 6.4 overs to complete a fine all-round performance.

West Indies women to tour Sri Lanka in January

West Indies’ women’s cricket team will arrive in Sri Lanka on January 18 nextyear for a 13-day tour.During their stay in Sri Lanka the Caribbean women will play a four-day TestMatch and three One-Day Internationals with the Sri Lankan women’s team.The West Indian side will play its only four-day match at the ColtsCricket Ground, Colombo from January 20-23 before travelling to Kandy forthe first of three One-Day Internationals at the Asgiriya Internationalcricket stadium on January 26.They’ll be back in Colombo for the second and the third one-dayers onJanuary 28 and 30 at the Colts Ground. They will travel to Pakistan after the tour.The Sri Lankan contingent is already hard at practice at the SinhaleseSports Club grounds. The pool of 20, coached by Vanessa Bowen, will bepruned to 14 by mid-November

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