Banks replaces Mohammed in squad for Jamaica

Omari Banks: clearly, happy to be back© AFP

West Indies have called up Omari Banks for their second Test against Bangladesh that begins on June 4 at Kingston, Jamaica. Dave Mohammed, the left-arm spinner who was in the squad for the first Test but did not make the playing XI, has been left out.Banks missed West Indies’ tour of South Africa after suffering a stress fracture to his back. He proved his match-fitness with a four-wicket haul against Bangladesh in a first class game at St. Vincent a week ago, and has been captaining Anguilla in the ongoing Leeward Islands championship.Squad Chris Gayle, Devon Smith, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Brian Lara (capt), Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Dwayne Smith, Ridley Jacobs (wk), Tino Best, Pedro Collins, Jermaine Lawson, Fidel Edwards, Ravi Rampaul, Omari Banks.

Rain rules at Old Trafford

Scorecard

A dark and dank Old Trafford© Getty Images

Manchester’s weather in the last few days has been more akin to the bleak midwinter than the summer solstice that recently passed, and so it came as no surprise when today’s opening NatWest Series fixture was abandoned without a ball being bowled.”After last night’s battering of rain, we were hopeful that the skies would clear this morning,” said Peter Marron, Lancashire’s head groundsman. But further belts of bad weather swept in throughout the afternoon, and it would have taken at least two hours of clear conditions to enable the mopping-up operation to be completed.The umpires did attempt several inspections throughout the day, although the sight of Daryl Harper’s umbrella being blown inside-out was a apt commentary on the state of the conditions. The high winds would have been a factor later in the day as well, as the temporary floodlights around the ground would not have been allowed to be erected to their full height.On the plus side for England, Marcus Trescothick, who had been passed fit to play after overcoming a sprain in his left ankle, will be given a couple of extra days to fully recover, while the captain, Michael Vaughan, spoke for his squad when he admitted he wasn’t too disappointed at being freed up to watch the European Championships quarter-final against Portugal.In a masterful stroke of PR, the ECB had announced that the latest that play could have started was at 7.47pm, exactly two minutes after the start of that game, but in the end there was no conflict of interests for the smattering of spectators who remained to the end.For England’s one-day team, however, it is business as usual. They have been phenomenally unlucky with the weather ever since their pre-Christmas tour of Sri Lanka, and of their last nine scheduled one-day matches, five have been abandoned as washouts (four of them without a ball being bowled) and a sixth was restricted to 30 overs a side.This latest abandonment is particularly hard luck on Yorkshire’s Anthony McGrath, who has tagged along with the squad since the tour of Bangladesh, without once getting a game. Now, in the absence of Andrew Flintoff, he had been inked in to start, but once again, he has been left to watch and wait.

Honours even after Gilchrist and Vettori heroics

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Adam Gilchrist played a characteristic hard-hitting knock in the face of danger at Christchurch© Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist catapulted Australia from the brief possibility of following on to trailing by 10 runs at the end of a swinging and absorbing day at Christchurch. Backed by Simon Katich, who scored 118 to seal his short-term career at No. 6, Gilchrist grabbed his cape to smash a century that threatened to break New Zealand for a second time this season.But just as they started planning a lead of up to 100, Australia were finished off by the impressive Daniel Vettori as he collected five wickets following some stinging Gilchrist treatment. Batting at No. 8 once Jason Gillespie was used as a nightwatchman, Gilchrist arrived at 201 for 6 when another wicket could have exposed the tail to a nervous period to avoid batting again.The 212-run seventh-wicket rescue act had a feeling of déjà vu for Stephen Fleming after his side controlled the game’s first seven sessions. But the eighth, a 133-run jaunt in which Katich brought up his second Test century, proved the most damaging until Australia lost their last four wickets for 19 runs. New Zealand walked unscathed through six overs to be 9 for 0 at stumps.Making 126 at Brisbane in November, Gilchrist’s cracking display was overlooked as Michael Clarke crashed 141 to turn a losing situation into an innings victory. This match was heading in a similar direction until he holed out to Vettori chasing a seventh six in an innings devalued only by the regularity of his 14 Test centuries. Gilchrist’s previous innings was an unforgettable 113 against Pakistan at Sydney. Before that was Brisbane, and four matches further back was the 104 at Bangalore. Two of those three responses came in the first game of the series when his side was in trouble.The danger with Gilchrist’s play is that the knocks will merge. His 121 came from 126 balls and was set up by an uninhibited attack on Vettori. Fuelled by lunch, Gilchrist targeted New Zealand’s most dangerous bowler and planted him for three sixes in three overs, earning 29 runs. Tempo set, he rattled up more boundaries and despite changes in flight and speed, Vettori was unable to break through until Ian O’Brien caught a slight mishit at deep mid-off. The cruel treatment suddenly eased and Vettori wiped over Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath to finish with 5 for 106. Once again he had tricked Australia, but once again he was short of quality support as the game ran away.Australia’s turnaround from on their backs to eyes level was impressive and familiar. Boundaries flowed and the deficit dropped when the two saviours arrived. Gilchrist was the star attraction but Katich was a capable deputy as he sprinkled moments of brilliance in his return from five Tests away watching his replacement Darren Lehmann.Katich’s century came from 173 balls and depended on positive play despite miscues and bouts of frustration. A hard day of graft seemed the best option for batsmen, but the logic didn’t convince Katich and he eyed 20 fours and one six. His pulling on a slowing wicket was powerful and regular; his off-side driving was careful, patient and often piercing.After being dropped twice in the past year to mean decisions, he wanted to cement the No. 6 spot and can stop looking at challengers for the rest of the series. Katich’s timing was crucial and Gilchrist gave him his moment to celebrate before it was interrupted by a spectator who was crash-tackled by security. At that point Fleming felt equally wounded.Ricky Ponting and Clarke had been deceived in the day’s very early stages and 36 runs were eked in the first hour. It is rare for Australia to bat ugly, but in the first session runs were difficult against penetrative swing bowling from Chris Martin and James Franklin.Before play many commentators – mostly Australian ones – generously decided the match was evenly poised. It was a brave verdict considering they started 292 runs behind with seven wickets in hand on an uncomfortable pitch for free-flowing strokes. Fleming’s band came out ready to starve and strike. Martin bowled a wonderful over to force a jumpy edge from Ponting and Clarke made a minor misjudgement to Franklin’s left-arm angle.When Gilchrist returned from lunch the mood of everybody changed. The bowlers worried and their radars wobbled, Fleming waited for too long for something positive to happen, and Katich settled in alongside his partner. The pair cruelly and efficiently combined to re-float Australia in a contest that became delightfully and unbelievably even.How they were out
Ponting c McCullum b Martin 46 (147 for 4)
Ball moved away off the pitch to surprise Ponting and he pushed an edge to McCullum, who caught smartly low and to his right.Clarke c McCullum b Franklin 8 (160 for 5)
Flirted slightly away from his body to an angled ball, forcing McCullum to come forward for an even better – and lower – catch.Gillespie c Cumming b Vettori 12 (201 for 6)
Propped front leg defensively, but straight ball hit high on the bat and skirted to short leg.Gilchrist c O’Brien b Vettori 121 (413 for 7)
Tried to launch a six over mid-on but fell a couple of metres short and O’Brien took the running catch.Katich c Vincent b Astle 118 (418 for 8)
Struggling for runs after Gilchrist’s departure, he aimed a tired, wide drive to an outswinger and found cover.Warne c Astle b Vettori 118 (426 for 9)
Slashed hard to a faster ball and Astle took the pace off with his first touch, grabbing it with his second.McGrath lbw Vettori 0 (432)
Swept across the line to give Vettori his fifth wicket.

Lehmann named Wisden Australia's Cricketer of the Year

Click here to order a copy from Cricshop

The first full-colour pictorial cover in Wisden’s 141-year history© Wisden

Darren Lehmann, who selflessly offered his Test place to Michael Clarke, is Cricketer of the Year. The award is recognition of Lehmann’s belated, unlikely and romantic international purple patch, which is currently on hold after he injured his hamstring in the third Test at Nagpur.The 2004-05 edition of , published today, is a history-making edition: the front image of a roaring Shane Warne is the first full-colour pictorial cover in 141-year history. mourns the modern trend towards “McCricket”, calling for a stop to “back-to-back Tests, whistlestop tours, two and four-Test series and all other dunderheaded attempts to jam Test cricket into a polystyrene carton and shove it down our throats as quickly as possible”. For its first 125 years, the five-Test series was cricket’s prestige forum. But Australia have played only one in the past three years and India one in the past seven. New Zealand last played a five-Test series 33 years ago, Pakistan 12 years ago and Sri Lanka have never played one. new editor Christian Ryan writes in his Editor’s Notes: “Only when Australia play England are we now assured the unique thrill of a five-Test series. And beware the hardheads: with their calculators for brains and cash registers for hearts, they are plotting to take even that away from us. Cricket tampers with its own crazy, bewitching rhythms at its peril.”The disappearance of the five-Test series is one of several troublesome issues confronted by a feistier, revamped edition. Cricket Australia (CA) comes in for the fiercest criticism. Of the board’s eagerness to play against a race-based Zimbabwean side, and its description of this year’s tour to Zimbabwe as “a tick in a box”, wonders: “Have Australian cricket administrators no heart, no moral existence at all?”Of the Sri Lankan offspinner Muttiah Muralitharan’s refusal to come to Australia last July, it says CA did not try hard enough to change his mind. “Anything, everything should have been done to make sure he felt comfortable … Australia is the only cricketing nation Murali has felt compelled to stay away from. History will judge us accordingly.”Kerry Packer’s Channel Nine network, the long-time broadcaster of Australian cricket, also comes under attack for televising its quiz show at the moment Shane Warne equalled the world bowling record in Darwin. It was Channel Nine, again because of rival scheduling commitments, who insisted on the bizarre 9.30am starts to this year’s Tests in Darwin and Cairns.”Packer’s priority has only ever been his own prosperity, not cricket’s,” it says. “But so long as the two went hand in hand, all was hunky-dory. In the past year, Packer has appeared happy to suck the game dry and give very little back … It makes you wonder whom cricket belongs to: Packer or the people. Maybe it’s time Cricket Australia reminded a certain billionaire who’s really Boss.”The 2004-05 edition of is at 976 pages the biggest ever and the first – in Australia or England – to incorporate balls faced and boundaries hit in Test scorecards. Among several innovations is a new section called “Farewells”, women’s player profiles, a beefed-up back half and two new tables listing the full career records of every Australian Test and one-day player in order of appearance.

Doordarshan to show India-Pakistan ODIs

The five ODIs to be played between India and Pakistan, starting from February 6 at Peshawar, will be available to millions of viewers on Doordarshan. This follows an agreement reached before the Supreme Court between Ten Sports, which has the exclusive telecast rights for the series, and Prasar Bharati, the state-run broadcaster.A division bench comprising of Justices Ashok Bhan and Tarun Chatterjee today directed Prasar Bharati to deposit with the Supreme Court a sum of Rs.15 crore (US$3,398,278 approx ) by February 9, which Ten Sports shall receive as the full and final settlement for sharing an “uninterrupted feed” for the five ODIs.According to the agreement, Prasar Bharati will not run any advertisements during the terrestrial transmission and will have to restrict the range of its satellite so that the signal does not spill over to the neighbouring countries.KS Sarma, Prasar Bharati’s CEO, said: “We will obey the order of the honourable Supreme Court and deposit Rs.15 crore. We will get a feed for all the five one-day internationals without running our own advertisements,” he told PTI after emerging from the court.The Supreme Court transferred a petition pending in the Bombay High Court and said henceforth all matters relating to the dispute shall be heard by a three-judge bench of the apex court. The petition filed by Taj Television Ltd, owner of Ten Sports, had sought a stay of the government guidelines which make it mandatory for sports channels to share feeds of sporting events of national importance with Prasar Bharati.

Clive Leach appointed as Durham chairman

Clive Leach, the new chairman of Durham © Getty Images

Clive Leach, the former chief executive of Tyne Tees Television, has been appointed as Durham’s new chairman.”I am honoured to become involved with Durham, one of the most innovative and exciting counties in cricket”, said Leach. “The North East has always been important to me and I hope that through my business and cricketing background I can help realise the Durham dream of having a successful team, developing the Riverside and hosting regular high-profile international cricket.”Long-time followers of the county may remember Leach from his playingdays. He played for Durham between 1960 and 1964 after four years of first-class cricket with Warwickshire and was also the professional for Bishop Auckland CC between 1960 and 1963.Leach has strong links with the North East having started his 30 years in television working with Tyne Tees. On his retirement from television in 1993 he was Chairman and Chief Executive of Yorkshire Tyne Tees plc. In 2000 he was awarded the CBE for services to training and education.”On behalf of Durham CCC I would like to welcome Clive Leach to the Board”, said outgoing chairman Bob Jackson. “It has been a privilege and a challenge for me to be chairman of the club over the last year and I am looking forward to working with Clive in my role as vice-chairman.”Durham’s chief executive David Harker added: “The club has conducted a wide-ranging and comprehensive search for a nationally respected business leader with strong North East links and a love of cricket. I believe that in Clive we have found the ideal candidate.”

Jason Mohammed leads rescue act

Jason Mohammed: chose the right time for his maiden first-class ton © Getty Images

Jason Mohammed produced an innings-saving maiden first-class century and Amit Jaggernauth chipped in with a record last-wicket support to pull Trinidad & Tobago back from the precipice on the first day of the Carib Beer International Challenge semi-final against the Windward Islands at Guaracara Park yesterday. In their team’s hour of greatest need – 171 for 9 – the pair fashioned a new last-wicket T&T regional record of 84 runs to give their side a final, fighting total of 255. The effort bettered, by 23, the 61 made by Ian Bishop and Mukesh Persad against Barbados back in 1997.In reply, the Windwards lost Rommel Cuurency, Craig Emmanuel and most crucially Devon Smith in the day’s last over – to the combination of Richard Kelly and Dave Mohammed – as they stumbled to 37 for 4 in their quest for first innings points. Undoubtedly, Jaggernauth’s responsible 33 was one of the highlights of the day for a reasonable but unspectacular Guaracara audience.But the day was Mohammed’s. Taking the spot, if not the slot, in the order Brian Lara would normally have filled, 19-year-old Mohammed, in only his second game and third innings at regional level, came up with Lara-like runs in circumstances in which the watchers would have expected the Windies master to excel. Dropped three times in his unbeaten 124, Mohammed nevertheless showed the confidence and poise that made him a certainty for the West Indies Under-19s at the recent World Cup in Sri Lanka.The work of Jaggernauth and himself, and earlier he and Kelly, also helped to spare Daren Ganga, their captain, further blushes. More than the greenish look of the strip, Guaracara’s good batting record would have influenced his decision to bat first. But by lunch – 72 for 5 – Ganga had been made to look less than astute. Ganga himself was one of three batsmen out without scoring in the session as Deighton Butler (11-1-44-2), and Jean Paul (13-1-51-2) made good use of the early moisture in the pitch and the movement it yielded.It was dramatic stuff from the time Sherwin Ganga snicked a Butler ball that left him to Junior Murray, the wicketkeeper, who then effected a tumbling left-handed take. The score was just 11. Next ball, Butler placed himself on a hat-trick when the elder Ganga was also adjudged by umpire Vincent Bullen to have edged to Murray. Dwayne Bravo survived the hat-trick ball. But, with five runs added to the total, he was a hapless bystander in his dismissal. A firm Lendl Simmons straight drive deflected off bowler Paul’s outstretched right hand and struck the stumps with Bravo, backing up, well short of his ground. The end of the game’s first hour found T&T in bad shape at 25 for 3. And things got much worse before they got better. At 42, there was more wobbling. Simmons, patient in getting to 15, succumbed to a low catch to Devon Smith in the slips off Paul, who had replaced Butler at the northern end.Thirty-six minutes were still left before lunch when Denesh Ramdin replaced him. But before Simmons had stripped off his pads, Ramdin was coming his way, too, the second first-ball victim of the morning. Defeated by extra bounce, he gave his counterpart Murray his third catch of the morning. Mohammed, having been given his first life the ball prior to Simmons’ dismissal, would have been forgiven for feeling overwhelmed by the swift decline. But uncertainty was not apparent in his play. Not unlike Ramdin, his former WI under-19 skipper, he seems to believe greatly in his ability. Primarily an on-side player despite his liking for the cut shot, he chanced his hand several times with lofted attempts over the mid-on region. But because of his general composure, which had been evident even in his debut game against Jamaica back in January, he and Kelly took their side to lunch on 72 for 5.It was hardly a position of safety. But after the interval, the precocious youngster and the ambitious, progressing all rounder improved the situation greatly. Kelly, measuring his play but still finding the boundary ten times in his knock of 58 with his clean, left-handed hitting and some fine driving, eventually added a vital 124 for the sixth wicket with Mohammed.They showed that batting was a relatively easy task on a pitch which had dried out under the sun. The problem was that there were no specialists left to support their effort. So when Kelly, losing concentration after getting to his third half-century of the season, tamely hit a Darren Sammy delivery into Rawl Lewis’ hands at short extra cover, T&T lost control again, with Kelly’s one of four wickets falling for just five runs.

Umpire Bucknor accuses TV crews of doctored images

Steve Bucknor: ‘It has been known to happen where the technology has been used to make umpires look bad’ © Getty Images

Steve Bucknor, a member of the ICC’s elite panel of umpires, has complained that television production companies are misusing technology to make umpires look bad and key players look good.Bucknor has revealed he has encountered instances of TV personnel maneuvering images to influence the flow and outcome of matches. “It has been known to happen where the technology has been used to make umpires look bad,” he told reporters on Friday. “Mats [the line graphic used to adjudge lbw decisions] have been moved, balls have disappeared, ball hitting the bat and only coming up into the fielder’s hands, but between the bat and the hand, no ball is found and you are told, ‘Sorry, we don’t have that clip, we can’t show it’.Bucknor, who has stood in a world record 111 Tests and four World Cup finals, as well as officiated 139 one-day internationals, noted he was speaking from personal experience. “It has happened; I’ve been in a game when it has happened,” he said. “Sometimes nothing is shown because the batsman was a key batsman and getting out at that stage would have made life very difficult for that team. It all depends on who is operating the technology. I’ve been told that this ball is the one with which the batsman got out, but the one that is being shown is not the same one he got out with. It has been known to happen. When these things are happening, it makes life extremely difficult for the umpires. Who do you trust from there on you don’t know.”Although he admits that there is a place for technology in the game and would like to see “a little bit more”, Bucknor said the misuse of the technology is eroding the trust between umpires and players. “In the beginning of my career, umpires were trusted. When umpires said not out, the man was trusted, so they would say he is a good umpire and nobody questioned him. Today, the technology shows up his mistakes, and makes life a little bit difficult for umpires, especially when it has been known to happen that technology has been used to make umpires look bad.”Bucknor was also disappointed that umpires were not consulted about the ICC Cricket Committee’s recommendation to allow players a certain number of appeals per innings to the TV replay umpire, if they feel a decision made by the on-field umpire may be incorrect. “I’d been happy been to be part of this change, but these things happen and we know about them happening rather than for us to say this is what we want. We’ll have to live by them. Whatever they say, we’ll just have to live by.”The ability of players to appeal against decisons made by on-field umpires were the main recommendations made by the ICC’s cricket committee during its two-day meeting in Dubai.

Vermeulen freed pending medical reports

The trial of Mark Vermeulen, who has been accused of starting fires at the Zimbabwe Cricket headquarters and the Zimbabwe Cricket Academy, has been further adjourned to March 9. The delay follows an agreement between the defence and the state that he undergo additional medical examinations by two government experts.Vermeulen’s defence lawyer, Eric Matinenga, presented the court with two medical reports from a psychiatrist and a clinical psychologist. Both diagnosed Vermeulen with “a non-pathological condition and consistent intermediate explosive disorder which can influence his conduct.” The court asked for further medical examinations to be undertaken under the country’s Mental Health Bill.The magistrate agreed to relax the conditions of bail, so allowing Vermeulen to resume playing cricket for Old Harrovians, his club side, when the Harare Vigne Cup League resumes on Sunday. He is, however, barred from playing matches at Harare Sports Club and the Zimbabwe Cricket Academy, which are both operated by Zimbabwe Cricket.

BBC pushed ECB for live cricket

The BBC attempted to reach a deal with the ECB for live Test match coverage, on a “dip in dip out” basis before deciding not to bid for the contract which was awarded to Sky Sports.In an ongoing saga which refuses to die down, it was reported yesterday by Dominic Coles, the BBC director of sports rights and finance, that the BBC’s proposal was to “dip in and out” of the cricket by showing shortened portions of the day’s play – the odd two-hour session of a Test match, for example – allowing Sky to retain their ball-by-ball live coverage. The corporation held 15 meetings with the ECB in talks which Coles described as “fruitful” – but it will be another four years, though, until the BBC can bid again for the rights.Speaking to the , he said the discussions had included “all permutations” to reach a more flexible arrangement. But, as of next summer, the only cricket available on terrestrial television will be highlights on channel Five. Despite being outbid by Channel 4 in 1999, Roger Mosey, the BBC’s director of sport, confirmed the corporation’s pledge to bring cricket back to terrestrial free-to-air television. “We have an obligation to licence fee payers to secure some of the rights,” he told today. “We will look very hard at the schedules…Sky wants to drive subscriptions and pays a premium because it is pay-TV.”In response to their all encompassing coverage for the next four years, Sky today have offered several deals and discounts to members of first-class counties, minor counties and MCC. However, despite this offering, it remains to be seen whether members will be prepared for the increased cost of watching live Test cricket.MPs are to hold an enquiry into the ECB’s decision to sell the broadcasting rights to satellite television at Westminster on November 29.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus